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Tuesday, December 03, 2024

Music Week

Expanded blog post, December archive (in progress).

Tweet: Music Week: 26 albums, 7 A-list

Music: Current count 43255 [43229] rated (+26), 12 [21] unrated (-9).

Another short week, attempting to revert to a normal (or at least more customary) publication date of Tuesday (or Monday). But also because we're expecting company from late tonight through the weekend, so I'm not expecting much more time to work on this (or anything else).

We finally moved back into our wrecked-and-renovated upstairs room, with all the dislocated clutter if not back in its original resting space at least stashed away somewhere we won't accidentally trip over. I'll still need to figure out some organization for the now empty closet space, but that's no longer on the critical path to something else. And if we do manage to declutter some, we might not even need it.

I wish I could say the 19th annual Francis Davis Jazz Critics Poll was properly shaped up, but I've bumbled through another week of deep thought and lightweight hacking, making only small measures of progress. The initial round of 230 invites went out on or near Nov. 20. (The 8 bounces have since been reduced to 5. Anti-spam problems persist, even within the rather compact jpadmin mail list. (I'm overdue to send a reminder to the more global jazzpoll mail list, but I keep thinking I'll have better news soon.) The website Voter Notes have a lot more detail, but are still unfinished. The more urgent project is to get a second round of ballot invites out, which may take as long as the end of the week. If you're expecting one and haven't heard yet, please nag me.

I've counted 27 ballots, and have 4-5 in my inbox today that I'll get to after posting this. The pace should pick up steadily from this week, although it's impossible to predict whether we will wind up with 120 or 150 or 180 ballots (or maybe even 200 if the second round really explodes). The biggest uncertainty is how much mail is actually getting through to voters, as there is no way (at least that I know of) to ensure or even accurately measure delivery. In the past, I've urged people who read this to spread the word, but I've never seen any evidence of that working.

So I'm torn between feelings of panic and que sera sera, with the coming distraction favoring the latter. No new work on the ultimate Speaking of Which. I glanced briefly at The Intelligencer today for the first time in a week or two, discovering that Biden pardoned his son -- which at least short-circuits the question of whether Trump would have done so (in the hollowest gesture of bipartisanship imaginable). Also Ed Kilgore attacking "Sanders, Warren, and other progressives" for "looking to steal some of Trump's populist street cred" and "just deny Democrats a united front" (against what? street cred?). Nothing there on South Korea yet, where the right does seem to have provoked a "united front" in defense of democracy.

Meanwhile, I've moved from Marshall Berman's All That Is Solid Melts Into Air to another old book I've long meant to read, Eric Hobsbawm's The Age of Capital: 1848-1875. I have two more Hobsbawm volumes lined up after that, with The Age of Extremes on a shelf hereabouts since I bought it hot off the press. I might also note that I did manage to take a break Sunday to fix a very comfy dinner. Had leftovers tonight, and they were delish. With company, hopefully I'll get to cook some more. Helps relieve stress, even though it does tend to come back on you.

I haven't filed my own ballot yet, but will do so this week. For a rough draft, you can look at my Jazz list. I have to reconsider the order, which has always been slapdash, but the leading candidates haven't changed much in well over a month -- the adds have been way down the list, which currently is up to a possible record-high 89 A-list jazz albums. One likely change is that I'll combine the Lowe volumes into one entry and make it my top pick. (The Pollmaster has allowed that to be legal. See the op. cit. Voter Notes.) I'll publish whatever I come up with next week, along with whatever news crops up. Meanwhile, my Non-Jazz list remains relatively lame, with a mere 49 A-list new albums, which Lamar Kendrick barely missed this week. I've done a little bit of EOY Aggregate work, but not much. I'll have time to catch up later. One thing I have zero interest in right now is 2025 releases. My 2024 demo queue is down to 6 albums right now. I should knock them down next week. As for saved download links, not my problem right now.

I've skipped past much bookkeeping work over the last month or so, and doubt I'll make any progress on it for a couple more weeks, but eventually I'll get to it. Looking forward to changes, around here if not out there, after the Poll.


New records reviewed this week:

  • Jacqui Dankworth: Windmills (2024, Perdido): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Djrum: Meaning's Edge (2024, Houndstooth, EP): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Taylor Eigsti: Plot Armor (2024, GroundUP Music): [sp]: B-
  • Floros Floridis/Matthias Bauer/Joe Hertenstein: Temporal Driftness (2023 [2024], Evil Rabbit): [sp]: A-
  • Joe Fonda Quartet: Eyes on the Horizon (2023 [2024], Long Song): [cd]: A-
  • Ben Goldberg/Todd Sickafoose/Scott Amendola: Here to There (2024, Secret Hatch): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Mickey Guyton: House on Fire (2024, Capitol Nashville): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Tom Harrell: Alternate Summer (2022 [2024], HighNote): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Cliff Korman Trio: Urban Tracks (2021 [2024], SS): [cd]: B+(*) [12-06]
  • Marie Krüttli Trio: Scoria (2023 [2024], Intakt): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Kendrick Lamar: GNX (2024, PGLang/Interscope): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Hayoung Lyou: The Myth of Katabasis (2024, Endectomorph Music): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Rob Mazurek Quartet: Color Systems (2022 [2024], RogueArt): [cdr]: B+(***)
  • Kresten Osgood Quintet: Live at H15 Studio (2017 [22024], ILK Music): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Reut Regev's R*Time: It's Now: R*Time Plays Doug Hammond (2023 [2024], ESP-Disk): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Sara Serpa: Encounters & Collisions (2023 [2024], Biophilia): [cd]: B+(*)
  • Skyzoo: Keep Me Company (2024, Old Soul Music): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Margaret Slovak & Chris Maresh: A Star's Light Does Fall (2024, Slovak Music): [cd]: B+(*)
  • Sun Ra Arkestra [Under the Direction of Marshall Allen]: Lights on a Satellite (2024, In+Out): [sp]: A-
  • Pat Thomas: The Solar Model of Ibn Al-Shatir (2024, Otoroku): [sp]: B+(**)

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

  • Duck Baker: Breakdown Lane: Free Jazz Guitar 1976-1998 (1976-98 [2024], ESP-Disk): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Miles Davis Quintet: Miles in France 1963 & 1964 [The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8] (1963-64 [2024], Columbia/Legacy, 6CD): [cd]: A-
  • Miles Davis: Miles '54: The Prestige Recordings (1954 [2024], Craft, 2CD): [sp]: A-
  • B.B. King: In France: Live at the 1977 Nancy Jazz Pulsations Festival (1977 [2024], Deep Digs/Elemental Music): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Sun Ra: Lights on a Satellite: Live at the Left Bank (1978 [2024], Resonance, 2CD): [cd]: A-

Old music:

  • Sun Ra & His Arkestra: Art Forms of Dimensions Tomorrow (1961 [2014], Enterplanetary Koncepts): [bc]: A-


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Liz Cole: I Want to Be Happy (self-released) [01-28]
  • Eugenie Jones: Eugenie (Open Mic) [01-20]
  • Doug MacDonald: Santa Monica Session (DMAC Music) [01-01]
  • Rob Mazurek Quartet: Color Systems (RogueArt) [11-11]
  • Joe Syrian Motor City Jazz Octet: Secret Message (Circle 9) [11-15]
  • Vincenzo Virgillito: Precondition (self-released) [01-01]

Sunday, December 01, 2024

Daily Log

Laura's computer is noisy. Likely culprit is CPU fan. I'm not sure yet of the CPU, but motherboard is ASUS M5A78-L, uATX, which supports AM3+ MD 760G + SB710 USB 3.0 HDMI. It looks like Socket AM3 was launched in 2009 as successor for AM2+, with AM3+ coming out in 2011. CPUs are AMD Phenom II, Athlon II, FX, and Opteron 3000 Series. It was superseded by AM4 (2016, Ryzen CPUs), and AM5 (2022, Eyzen/Epyc). AM3+ heatsink "are placed in a rectangle with lateral lengths of 48 mm and 96 mm for AMD's sockets AM2, AM2+, AM3, AM3+, and FM2."

AM3+ CPUs are almost all used.

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Music Week

Expanded blog post, November archive (final).

Tweet: Music Week: 29 albums, 5 A-list

Music: Current count 43229 [43200] rated (+29), 21 [28] unrated (-7).


New records reviewed this week:

  • Holman Álvarez: Hidden Objects (2023 [2024], Sunnyside): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Awon x Phoniks: Golden Era 2 (2024, Don't Sleep): [sp]: A-
  • Peter Bernstein: Better Angels (2024, Smoke Sessions): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Betty Bryant: Lotta Livin' (2024, Bry-Mar Music): [sp]: A-
  • Scott Colley/Edward Simon/Brian Blade: Three Visitors (2024, GroundUP Music): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Steve Davis: We See (2024, Smoke Sessions): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Elucid: Revelator (2024, Fat Possum): [sp]: A-
  • Everliven Sound & Slimline Mutha: Echo Chamber (2024, self-released): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Ruth Goller: Skyllumina (2024, International Anthem): [sp]: B
  • Paul Heaton: The Mighty Several (2024, EMI): [sp]: B+(**)
  • John Hollenbeck & NDR Bigband: Colouring Hockets (2023 [2024], Plexatonic): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Snorre Kirk: What a Day! (2024, Stunt): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Lemadi Trio: Canonical Discourse (2024, A New Wave of Jazz Axis): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Peter Lenz: Breathe: Music for Large Ensembles (2023 [2024], GambsART): [cd]: B
  • David Maranha/Rodrigo Amado: Wrecks (2023 [2024], Nariz Entupido): [cd]: B+(***)[10-25]
  • Claire Martin: Almost in Your Arms (2024, Stunt): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Nuse Tyrant: Juxtaposed Echoes (2024, M25): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Adonis Rose Trio + One: For All We Know (2024, Storyville): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Sophie: Sophie (2021 [2024], Transgressive): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Spinifex: Undrilling the Hole (2024, TryTone): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Tonus: Analog Deviation (2023 [2024], A New Wave of Jazz Axis): [cd]: B+(*)
  • Transition Unit: Fade Value (2023 [2024], A New Wave of Jazz Axis): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Twin Talk: Live (2023 [2024], Shifting Paradigm): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Tyler, the Creator: Chromakopia (2024, Columbia): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Martina Verhoeven Quintet: Indicator Light (Live at Paradox 2023) (2023 [2024], A New Wave of Jazz Axis): [cd]: A-
  • Cole Williams: How We Care for Humanity (2024, Four Corner): [sp] **

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

  • Emily Remler: Cookin' at the Queens (1984-88 [2024], Resonance, 2CD): [cd]: A- [11-29]
  • McCoy Tyner/Joe Henderson: Forces of Nature: Live at Slugs' (1966 [2024], Blue Note): [sp]: B+(***)

Old music:

  • Elucid: I Told Bessie (202, Backwoodz Studioz): [sp]: B+(***)


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Miles Davis Quintet: Miles in France 1963 & 1964 [The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8] (Columbia/Legacy, 6CD) [11-08]
  • Ginetta's Vendetta: Fun Size (Kickin' Wiccan Music) [11-24]
  • Roberto Magris: Freedom Is Peace (JMood) [12-01]

Monday, November 25, 2024

Daily Log

Knee still bothering me. I wrote to doctor: [redacted]

I went to see the doctor late afternoon. He thought the wound was better, but offered another course of antibiotics (same as before). I got that filled, picked up some gyros, came home and walked the dog, then went out shopping for closet lumber, also groceries.

Friday, November 22, 2024

Music Week

Expanded blog post, November archive (in progress).

Tweet: Music Week: 47 albums, 3 A-list

Music: Current count 43200 [43153] rated (+47), 28 [26] unrated (+2).


New records reviewed this week:

  • Eric Alexander: Timing Is Everything (2023 [2024], Cellar Music): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Eric Alexander/Mike LeDonne: Together (2023 [2024], Cellar Music): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Michaël Attias: Quartet Music Vol. I + II: LuMiSong + Kardamon Fall (2021-22 [2024], Out of Your Head, 2CD): [cd]: A-
  • Michaël Attias: Quartet Music Vol. I: LuMiSong (2021 [2024], Out of Your Head): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Michaël Attias: Quartet Music Vol. II: Kardamon Fall (2022 [2024], Out of Your Head): [cd]: B+(***)
  • George Cables: I Hear Echoes (2024, HighNote): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds: Wild God (2024, Bad Seed/Play It Again Sam): [sp]: C+
  • Confidence Man: 3AM (La La La) (2024, Chaos/Polydor): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Day Dream: Duke & Strays Live: Works by Duke Ellington & Billy Strayhorn (2023 [2024], Corner Store Jazz, 2CD): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Hania Derej Quartet: Evacuation (2023 [2024], ZenneZ): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Elin Forkelid: Songs to Keep You Company on a Dark Night (2024, Sail Cabin): [sp]: B+(**)
  • The Fugs: Dancing in the Universe (2023, Fuga): [bc]: B+(**)
  • Halsey: The Great Impersonator (2024, Columbia): [sp]: A-
  • The Hard Quartet: The Hard Quartet (2024, Matador): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Alex Heitlinger Jazz Orchestra: Slush Pump Truck Stop (2024, SteepleChase): [sp]: B
  • Cassandra Jenkins: My LIght, My Destroyer (2024, Dead Oceans): [sp]: B+(*)
  • The Jesus and Mary Chain: Glasgow Eyes (2024, Fuzz Club): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Samara Joy: Portrait (2024, Verve): [sp]: B+(*)
  • The Linda Lindas: No Obligation (2024, Epitaph): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Moby: Always Centered at Night (2024, Mute): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Monolake: Studio (2024, Imbalance Computer Music): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Thurston Moore: Flow Critical Lucidity (2024, Daydream Library Series): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Meshell Ndegeocello: No More Water: The Gospel of James Baldwin (2024, Blue Note): [sp]: B+(**)
  • The Necks: Bleed (2024, Northern Spy): [sp]: B+(*)
  • The New Mastersounds: Old School (2024, One Note): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Peter Perrett: The Cleansing (2024, Domino): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Arun Ramamurthy Trio: New Moon (2023 [2024], Greenleaf Music): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Remedy [Thomas Heberer/Joe Fonda/Joe Hertenstein]: Live at Jazzkammer (2024, 420 CPW): [bc]: B+(**)
  • Soccer Mommy: Evergreen (2024, Loma Vista): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Tyshawn Sorey/Adam Rudolph: Archaisms II (2023 [2024], Meta): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Squarepusher: Dostrotime (2024, Warp): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Peter Van Huffel/Meinrad Kneer/Yorgos Dimitriadis: Synomilies (2022 [2024], Evil Rabbit): [bc]: B+(**)
  • Friso van Wijck: Friso van Wijck's Candy Container (2024, TryTone): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Andy Wheelock/Whee 3 Trio: In the Wheelhouse (2024, OA2): [cd]: B+(**)

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

  • Roy Hargrove's Crisol: Grande-Terre (1998 [2024], Verve): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Andrew Hill: A Beautiful Day Revisited (2002 [2024], Palmetto, 2CD): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Charlie Parker: Bird in Kansas City (1941-51 [2024], Verve): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Bernie Senensky: Moment to Moment (2001-20 [2023], Cellar Music) **

Old music:

  • Eric Alexander: Man With a Horn (1997, Milestone): [yt]: B+(***)
  • Blue Muse ([2019], Blues Maker Foundation): [bc]: B+(***)
  • Andrew Hill: But Not Farewell (1990 [1991], Blue Note): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Ruckus Juice & Chittlins: The Great Jug Bands Vol. 1 [1927-35 [1998], Yazoo): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Ruckus Juice & Chittlins: The Great Jug Bands Vol. 2 )1927-35 [1998], Yazoo): [sp]: A-
  • Trout Fishing in America: Safe House (2022, Trout): [sp]: B+(*)


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Holman Álvarez: Hidden Objects (Sunnyside) [11-08]
  • Duck Baker: Breakdown Lane: Free Jazz Guitar 1976-1998 (ESP-Disk) [11-01]
  • Joe Fahey: Andrea's Exile (Rough Fish): LP+CD
  • Ben Goldberg/Todd Sickafoose/Scott Amendola: Here to There (Secret Hatch) [10-25]
  • John Hollenbeck & NDR Bigband: Colouring Hockets (Plexatonic) [11-15]
  • Cliff Korman Trio: Urban Tracks (SS) [12-06]
  • David Maranha/Rodrigo Amado: Wrecks (Nariz Entupido) [10-25]
  • Margaret Slovak & Chris Maresh: A Star's Light Does Fall (Slovak Music) [11-01]

Daily Log

I posted this comment onto my "(Not Yet) Music Week" Facebook post:

I finally sent out 228 Poll invitations yesterday. When I cloned the Mid-Year letter template, I forgot to edit the subject line, so they all went out saying "Mid-Year." I also got 7 or 8 bounces, plus an auto-response notice from someone who can't be bothered to just ignore email. The experience was even worse than I expected (remembered?), and my efforts to figure out a better way have been fruitless so far. I'm pretty frazzled, and day is over half-shot, but I've collected the album list (47) for an updated post tonight (same link, more stuff), probably late tonight (depends on how much I feel like griping about, which right now is a lot). Not much good news to report. Nick Cave is currently a C+, but if I had to hear it again, it's more likely to drop than improve. Second highest previously unheard meta-rated album was Cassandra Jenkins, a B+(**). First Poll ballot had 7 albums I hadn't heard. Those I've since checked out are mid-B+.

Monday, November 18, 2024

(Not Yet) Music Week

Blog link.

This week's Music Week is being held hostage until I get my initial round of Francis Davis Jazz Critics Poll ballot invites sent out (aiming for Tuesday, but probably Wednesday). Meanwhile, you can probably find some new records in the November Streamnotes archive. Not a particularly big week so far, but I'm working on it.

My main reason for posting anything at all today is that I have some links to share:

  • The 19th Annual Francis Davis Jazz Critics Poll Begins: I posted this on Saturday, after sending out initial mail to my GNU Mailman list on Thursday. I don't have much more news yet, but wanted to make sure this much got some distribution. More in a couple days, but meanwhile, check out the Poll website. Focus right now is to provide information for voters. As we're currently updating the invite list, please feel free to suggest someone (even yourself). I also have set up the poll admin/discussion group, so if you're interested in following our deliberations (even if you're not a voter), let me know.

  • Q and A: Two recent questions answered (well, sort of).

  • Speaking of Which: No new one (now or most likely ever), but I keep finding things that seem like they belong here (and I feel like saving), so this swan song has grown to 317 links, 33193 words.

  • The Best Non-Jazz Albums of 2024: Way back in July, in conjunction with my Mid-Year Jazz Critics Poll, I compiled The Best Jazz Albums of 2024, and I've been trying to update it as we go, but I put off doing the Non-Jazz complement until now. So, 47 A-list new releases (+ 3 from 2023) and 7 reissues/historic music, which rather pales in comparison to 85 A-list new jazz (+3 from 2023) and 18 reissues/historic (+1 from 2023). Most years I have a large jazz/non-jazz ratio when I initially compile the lists, but that narrows as I catch up with the EOY lists. But I don't think I've ever had this much imbalance before.

  • Metacritic Aggregate: I started working on this mid-year, but haven't done a very good job of keeping it up to date. But this week I added the first EOY lists from Uncut, Mojo, and Bleep. This is not a huge priority for me, but it does help guide me to things to check out. There is also a new compilations of old/various music file, but it is very short (44 albums, vs. 1210 for new releases).

I ran the ratings counter and so far I'm +30 on the week, but only one A- so far. Unrated is -1, but I still have some unpacking to do.

Back to work now.

Saturday, November 16, 2024

The 19th Annual Francis Davis Jazz Critics Poll Begins

Blog link.

Friday, November 15, 2024

Daily Log

Back on [11-12], I posted this to Facebook:

I thought I'd mention here that I just updated my Speaking of Which from Monday, which covers the fallout of Tuesday's election, as well as other atrocities. I've been doing these weekly posts for many years now, but this is my biggest one ever, and I think has a lot of interesting reports and thoughts. I've also decided it will be my last one, lest it become an all-consuming black hole. Music Week will continue (at least to 2025), and I have other projects I've been meaning to get to. So I'll be OK. Not so sure about you, but what I've been doing doesn't seem to have been helping much.

I did get a couple of nice comments:

  • Rannfrid Thelle: I've only just started reading this, Tom, it is so good! I have a tab open so I can keep coming back to it.

  • Greg Morton: I intentionally want to make this public, so here I go. I think you should electronically bind all of your Speaking of Which into a single e-book and send it, without having even been asked, to the university Political Science department of your choice (or departmentS, plural) so that it/they can be used by future students who research this era. What you have captured is so big, and so historically important (I want to say crucial) that it needs to be saved. You will probably say that you were just one person, one voice, so why would your opinions matter to future scholars, but please know that you spoke loudly and passionately for many of us and we need to have those words remembered. Thanks.

  • Iris Demento: Tom Hull's is one of the best analyses I've seen and is helping me focus.

I also got mail through the Q&A form, that related to the post:

  • Gary Finney: [] It is with great sadness that I read your dismay with the state of politics in this country. You are not alone. Individual people can exhibit behavior so irrational that they are deemed insane. Collectively, this country seems to have gone insane.

    I have enjoyed reading your astute, erudite observations on political science/social justice issues via Speaking Of Which and will miss your weekly posts, should you indeed bring things to a halt.

    I feel that we're we to live in the same city, we'd probably be friends. Our paths as rock 'n rollers who veered into a jazz direction is a commonality, as is our interest in politics. Being four years your junior, I too have been indelibly shaped by the sixties.

    So, thank you for all of your posts. You are a beacon of hope in a world whose prospects seem to get dimmer by the day. I look forward to participating, once again, in the Francis Davis poll.

  • Ziggy Schouws: [11-15] I hope I misread your doubts about continuing Speaking if Which, for me it's the ideal start of the week, to have an overview of all the important topics in one click (and to realize that things can always be worse . . . ).


Getting reports back from Dr. Tibbe.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Daily Log

Went to see doctor today. Was overdue for checkup, so they did mucho lab work, but immediarte issue was knee abrasion from fall a few days back. Didn't seem to be healing, so they recommended antibacterial cream, with a course of antibiotics if that fails. Will find out about tests later. Meanwhile, I filed this tweet:

Went to Dr. office today, and had to answer standard mental health assessments: Q: have you been depressed lately; A: only since election. Second Q on inactivity, same answer. Nurse wrote down NO to both, without tipping her own hand. Hard to be insane when world is.

Later in the day, regarding Huckabee's appointment as Ambassador to Israel, I tweeted:

No sooner than we vote against World War III, and Trump appoints America's first-ever Ambassador to Armageddon. Talk about bait and switch!

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Daily Log

With Speaking of Which canned, the obvious option is to save things that I want to save in the Notebook, which means more and more frequent Daily Logs.

This is from Michael Tatum, in Facebook: [11-07]

The smug complacency of the Democrats thought there was portent in this and so many other Trump moments from the last few months, where Trump insulted Detroit in a city thirty miles away, to one of his dwindling crowds. No way they could have voted for that unhinged weirdo loser, right?

Wrong. What Democrats don't understand is that Trump's biggest demographic -- middle-aged "Christian" males without a college education -- would have voted for him no matter what. They share his resentments -- toward immigrants, people of color, LGBTQ people, and most of all, women.

This is a truly sad day for America. In the next four years, rich will get their spoils, everyone else the crumbs, which is always the Republican's game plan. Has been for decades. Women's rights will continue to be curtailed, as will those of the LGBTQ. Our policies toward immigrants (at least, the ones from countries that aren't Norway) will become even crueler.

I have no idea what is in store for this country, but if Project 2025 is any indication, even if they enact half of that garbage into law we're headed toward fascism. Which I'm beginning to think is attractive to a lot of people -- until they realize their rights, or those of someone they care about, will be stripped away, too.

As for myself, I think I will renew my Planned Parenthood membership, maybe support an LGBTQ association in a vulnerable community. Neither of those issues directly affect me, but that's the point of life isn't it? Reaching out to those who need your help, even if you don't directly benefit from it?

Lastly, to all those conservatives who go on about "peace and love," a phrase that has been co-opted by a lot of hateful, sexist, xenophobic, homophobic, transphobic people who are everything but peaceful or loving to people that are "different" from them. Read a book -- a real one. You might learn why people like me are horrified by a large portion of this country.

Facebook post by Sal Boca, who learned a bit about Georgian food while reporting on their election:

Thank you for the kind birthday wishes everyone. I just got back from a reporting trip to the country Georgia so I made a Georgian Supra (feast) for my family and close friends. We drank a lot of toasts of Georgian wine, so many we forgot to take a picture.

Everything is family style at a supra, with all of the side/veg dishes served room temp or cold and on the table at all times. This included eggplant and peppers, cooked and raw salad (one dish with both ingredients), various pickles, beets in sour plum sauce, roasted pumpkin, and the national side dish of cucumber, tomato, and onion in a zesty walnut garlic sauce.

And fresh bread hot from the oven of course. The bread culture in Georgia is the best in the world. I'll fight any German or Frenchman on the block over this.

These are sampled at will between the hot meat courses, starting with a beef and tomato stew called chashashuli, a sausage and lamb meatball course served with a cold yogurt sauce, and duck breast in blackberry sauce.

After all that no one had room for khachapuri or khinkali so we saved those for a later date.

The election didn't exactly turn out like we had hoped but that wasn't too much of a surprise. We have the next four years to deal with that.

What's not going to change is my commitment to my people and celebrating our lives every single day. The bullshit narcissists who 'run' our country have never valued the people or things that are most important to me. I do not look to them for guidance or acceptance. I'm going to resist this dumbass just like the last one and the one before that.

One way to do that, my favorite way, is to make sure we all have a place where we can value each other in the private, personal ways that actually matter. If you didn't make it to the supra this year just know you're already invited to the next one.

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Music Week

Expanded blog post, November archive (in progress).

Tweet: Music Week: 35 albums, 5 A-list

Music: Current count 43153 [43118] rated (+35), 26 [36] unrated (-10).


New records reviewed this week:

  • Ashtyn Barbaree: Sent Through the Ceiling (2024, Artists 3 60): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Big Bambi: Compositions for Bass Guitar & Bassoon, Vol. I (2022 [2024], Greene Avenue Music): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Steve Coleman and Five Elements: PolyTropos/Of Many Turns (2024, Pi): [cd]: A-
  • Caleb Wheeler Curtis: The True Story of Bears and the Invention of the Battery (2024, Imani, 2CD): [cd]: A-
  • Andy Haas: For the Time, Being (2024, Resonant Music): [cd]: B+(*)
  • Laird Jackson: Life (2024, self-released): [cd]: B+(*)
  • Ariel Kalma/Jeremiah Chiu/Marta Sofia Honer: The Closest Thing to Silence (2022-23 [2024], International Anthem): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Pandelis Karayorgis/George Kokkinaris: Out From Athens (2023 [2024], Driff): [bc]: B+(**)
  • Rebecca Kilgore: A Little Taste: A Tribute to Dave Frishberg (2023 [2024], Cherry Pie Music)
  • Lady Gaga: Harlequin (2024, Interscope): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Brian Lynch: 7X7BY7 (2021 [2024], Holistic MusicWorks): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Lyrics Born: Goodbye, Sticky Rice (2024, Mobile Home): [sp]: A-
  • JD McPherson: Nite Owls (2024, New West): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Willie Nelson: Last Leaf on the Tree (2024, Legacy): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Outer Spaceways Incorporated: Kronos Quartet & Friends Meet Sun Ra (2024, Red Hot +): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Cene Resnik/Samo Salamon/Samuel Ber: The Thinkers (Samo): [bc]: B++(***)
  • Kevin Sun: Quartets (2022-23 [2024], Endectomorph Music, 2CD): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Western Jazz Collective: The Music of Andrew Rathbun (2021 [2024], Origin): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Tucker Zimmerman: Dance of Love (2024, 4AD): [sp]: A-

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

  • Black Artist Group: For Peace and Liberty: In Paris, Dec 1972 (1972 [2024], WeWantSounds): [sp]: B+(***)

Old music:

  • Steve Coleman Group: Motherland Pulse (1985, JMT): [yt]: B+(***)
  • Steve Coleman and Five Elements: The Sonic Language of Myth: Believing, Learning, Knowing (1999, RCA Victor): [yt]: B+(***)
  • Steve Coleman and Five Elements: Drop Kick (1992, RCA/Novus): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Steve Coleman and the Mystic Rhythm Society: Myths, Modes and Means (1995, Groovetown/RCA/BMG France): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Steve Coleman and Metrics: The Way of the Cipher (1995, Groovetown/RCA/BMG France): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Steve Coleman: Invisible Paths: First Scattering (2007, Tzadik): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Rebecca Kilgore and Dave Frishberg: Not a Care in the World (1995, Arbors): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Rebecca Kilgore & Dave Frishberg: The Starlit Hour (1997 [2001], Arbors): [r]: B+(***)
  • Rebecca Kilgore: Moments Like This (1998-99 [2001], HeavyWood Music): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Rebecca Kilgore and the Bobby Gordon Trio: Make Someone Happy: A Further Remembrance of Maxine Sullivan, Volume Two (2004 [2005], Audiophile): [sp]: A-
  • Rebecca Kilgore: Rebecca Kilgore's Lovefest at the Pizzarelli Party (2010, Arbors): [r]: B+(**)
  • Rebecca Kilgore: With Hal Smith's Rhythmakers (2015, Audiophile): [r]: B+(*)
  • Rebecca Kilgore With Hal Smith's Rhythmakers: Sings the Music of Fats Waller (2016, Audiophile): [sp]: B+(***)


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Michaël Attias: Quartet Music Vol. I: LuMiSong (Out of Your Head) [03-01]

Monday, November 11, 2024

Speaking of Which

Blog link.

Draft file opened 2024-11-06 2:00 PM.

Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Music Week

Expanded blog post, November archive (in progress).

Tweet: Music Week: 19 albums, 3 A-list

Music: Current count 43118 [43099] rated (+19), 36 [41] unrated (-5).

We got to the polls later than I expected, so I had some time early today to fiddle with, and I used it to add more links to yesterday's Speaking of Which (up to 159, from 135). Vox emailed me a couple election anxiety/guide articles, so I figured it wouldn't hurt to cite them. I sometimes imagine going back through the blog for notes to write a journal-type book, so it's nice to have a fairly competent record, even if much of it is of passing interest. My latest concept for such a book would be subtitled What I Learned During the 2024 Election. Most of what I've learned is how irrational people can be in weighing matters of politics. Main downside to developing that idea is that most of my notes are from people who are well-informed and exceptionally rational. Explaining the 40-60% of Americans who are supposed to be voting for Trump today is going to take more research, and it's not likely to be pretty.

I'm a bit surprised that the rated count this week is only 19, but we're a couple days short of a week, and in a bit of a down cycle. I am finally nearing the end of my bedroom/closet project. I did some more caulking today, around the trim (which already has one coat, but in various places needs another). I'll sand and paint tomorrow. It'll probably take another day to touch up spots where I colored outside the lines. I'm a pretty lousy painter, so that happens more often than it should. That leaves the problem with the ceiling (masking tape pulled down strips and splotches of paint), but I'm going to kick that back to the guy who plastered and painted the ceiling in the first place, and it shouldn't take him long.

I got all the paneling up in the closet, including new boards for the ceiling. I put the lights back up this afternoon. Next thing there is to cut some trim boards and screw them in place. The boards are prepped, and most of that should go pretty quickly. I don't have a plan for finishing it yet, but we don't have to do that part before moving back into the bedroom (actually, more of an office, but it has a futon, which works for a spare bed). What we will still need to do is cleaning, sorting, and reorganizing, but that's an ongoing process everywhere.

My next big project should be the Francis Davis Jazz Critics Poll. I'll try to set up the website next week, and get invites out the week after. Biggest uncertainty there is communications, as my email list last year (and mid-year) proved pretty unreliable. That probably means paying for a commercial list provider, as it's almost impossible to avoid spam blacklisting on your own -- presumably, that is doable if that's your business, otherwise you wouldn't have a business. We also need to vet new critics. I'm thinking of setting up an advisory board to help on things like that, as well as to sanity-check my own thinking and coding. If you're interested in helping, or just know of a critic we should be polling, please get in touch.

As for my own writing, the next two months should be a good time to re-evaluate what, if anything, I still might try to work on.

I've resisted checking the news all evening, which should hold out until I get this (and the Speaking of Which) updates up, around 11 PM CDT.


New records reviewed this week:

  • T.K. Blue: Planet Bluu (2022 [2024], Jaja): [cd]: B+(**)
  • John Cale: POPtical Illusion (2024, Domino): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Avishai Cohen: Ashes to Gold (2023 [2024], ECM): [sp]: B+(**)
  • The Cure: Songs of a Lost World (2024, Fiction): [sp]: B+(*)
  • The Dare: What's Wrong With New York? (2024, Republic): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Joe Fahey: Andrea's Exile (2024, Rough Fish): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Nubya Garcia: Odyssey (2024, Concord Jazz): [sp]: B
  • Rich Halley 4: Dusk and Dawn (2023 [2024], Pine Eagle): [cd]: A-
  • Jazzmeia Horn: Messages (2024, Empress Legacy): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Randy Ingram: Aries Dance (2024, Sounderscore): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Ryan Keberle & Catharsis: Music Is Connection (2023-24 [2024], Alternate Side): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Jason Keiser: Kind of Kenny (2024, OA2): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Laura Marling: Patterns in Repeat (2024, Chryalis/Partisan): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Thollem McDonas: Infinite-Sum Game (2023 [2024], ESP-Disk): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Nacka Forum: Peaceful Piano (2024, Moserobie): [cd]: A-
  • NLE Choppa: Slut Szn (2024, Warner, EP): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Pony Boy All-Star Big Band: This Is Now: Live at Boxley's (2024, Pony Boy): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Brandon Seabrook: Object of Unknown Function (2023 [2024], Pyroclastic): [cd]: B+(*)
  • Luke Winslow-King: Flash-a-Magic (2024, Bloodshot): [sp]: B+(*)

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

  • Terry Gibbs Dream Band: Vol. 7: The Lost Tapes, 1959 (1959 [2024], Whaling City Sound) [10-11]

Old music:

  • None.


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Lemadi Trio: Canonical Discourse (A New Wave of Jazz Axis) [10-15]
  • Tonus: Analog Deviation (A New Wave of Jazz Axis) [10-15]
  • Transition Unit: Fade Value (A New Wave of Jazz Axis) [10-15]
  • Martina Verhoeven Quintet: Indicator Light (Live at Paradox 2023) (A New Wave of Jazz Axis) [10-15]

Monday, November 04, 2024

Speaking of Which

Blog link.

Draft file opened 2024-11-01 5:10 PM.

Trying to wrap this up Monday afternoon, but I keep sinking into deep comments, like the Müller entry below, to which I could easily add another 3-5 paragraphs. Now I need to take a long break and do some housework, so I'm not optimistic that I'll be able to add much before posting late this evening. We're among the seeming minority who failed to advance vote, so will trek to the polls tomorrow and do our bit. As I've noted throughout (and even more emphatically in my Top 10 Reasons to Vote for Harris vs. Trump), I'm voting for Harris. While Kansas is considered a surefire Trump state -- the silver lining here is that we're exposed to relatively little campaigning -- around my neighborhood the Harris signs outnumber the Trump signs about 10-0 (seriously, I haven't seen a single one, although I've heard of Harris signs being stolen). Not much down ballot activity either, although if I find any more Democrats, I'll vote for them (minimally, our state legislators, who are actually pretty good).

In the end, it got late and I gave up. Perhaps I'll add some more tidbits tomorrow, but my more modest plans are to go vote, stop at a restaurant we like after voting, and finish the bedroom trim paint. Presumably there'll be a Music Week before the day's done, but not really a lot to report there.

Soon as I got up Tuesday, I found myself adding a couple "chatter" items, so I guess I'm doing updates on Election Day. In which case, I might as well break my rule and include a sample of the extremely topical items that will become obsolete as soon as they start counting ballots. I'll keep them segregated here:


Top story threads:

Israel:

America's Israel (and Israel's America):

Israel vs. world opinion:

  • Juan Cole: [11-02] As UN warns entire population of Gaza is at risk of death, Bill Clinton says he's not keeping score. Here's a report on Clinton's campaign for Harris:

  • Nada Elia: [11-01] On vote shaming, and lesser evils: "I will not be shamed into voting for a candidate who supports the genocide of the Palestinian people, and no one who supports progressive issues should be either." Hers is a vote against Harris -- not sure in favor of who or what -- and I think we have to respect her conviction, even if one disagrees with her conclusion. We need people opposed to genocide more than we need voters for Harris, not that the two need be exclusive. Elections never just test one red line, so they require us to look beyond simple moral judgments and make a messy political one. Agreed that Harris fails on this red line -- as does her principal (and only practical) opponent, arguably even worse[*] -- but there are other issues at play, some where Harris is significantly preferable to Trump, none where the opposite is the case. I don't have any qualms or doubts about voting for Harris vs. Trump. But I respect people who do.

    [*] Harris, like Biden (with greater weight of responsibility), is a de facto supporter of Israel committing genocide, but she does not endorse the concept, and remains in denial as to what is happening (unaccountably and, if you insist, inexcusably, as there is little room for debating the facts). Trump, on the other hand, appears to have explicitly endorsed genocide (e.g., in his comments like "finish the job!"). Both the racism that separates out groups for collective punishment -- of which genocide is an extreme degree -- and the penchant for violent punishment are usually right-wing traits, which makes them much more likely for Trump than for Harris. And Trump's right-wing political orientation is more likely to encourage and sustain genocide in the future, as it derives from his character and core political beliefs.

    Some other pieces on the genocide voting conundrum (probably more scattered about, since I added this grouping rather late):

  • Chris Hedges: [10-31] Israel's war on journalism.

    There are some 4,000 foreign reporters accredited in Israel to cover the war. They stay in luxury hotels. They go on dog and pony shows orchestrated by the Israeli military. They can, on rare occasions, be escorted by Israeli soldiers on lightning visits to Gaza, where they are shown alleged weapons caches or tunnels the military says are used by Hamas.

    They dutifully attend daily press conferences. They are given off-the-record briefings by senior Israeli officials who feed them information that often turns out to be untrue. They are Israel's unwitting and sometimes witting propagandists, stenographers for the architects of apartheid and genocide, hotel room warriors.

    Bertolt Brecht acidly called them the spokesmen of the spokesmen.

    And how many foreign reporters are there in Gaza? None.

    The Palestinian reporters in Gaza who fill the void often pay with their lives. They are targeted, along with their families, for assassination.

    At least 134 journalists and media workers in Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon, have been killed and 69 have been imprisoned, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, marking the deadliest period for journalists since the organization began collecting data in 1992.

  • Jonathan Ofir: [10-30] New UN Special Rapporteur report warns Israel's genocide in Gaza could be expanding to the West Bank: "A new report by Francesca Albanese."

  • Wamona Wadi: [11-03] CNN finally covered the Gaza genocide -- from the point of view of Israeli troops with PTSD: Don't laugh. That's a real thing, a form of casualty that's rarely calculated, or for that matter even anticipated, by war planners. It should be counted as reason enough not to start wars that can possibly be avoided, which is pretty much all of them. Perhaps it pales in comparison to the other forms of trauma unleashed by war, but it should be recognized and treated the only way possible, with peace.

  • Videos: I have very little patience for watching videos on computer, but the one with Suárez came highly recommended, and the title shows us something we need to be talking about now. When I got there, I found much more, so I noted a few more promising titles (not all vetted, but most likely to be very informative).

Election notes: First of all, I'm deliberately not reporting on polling, which right or wrong will be obsolete in a couple days, and saves me from looking at most of this week's new reporting. Two more notes this week: this section has sprawled this week, as I've wound up putting many pieces that cover both candidates, or otherwise turn on the election results, here; also, I'm struck by how little I'm finding about down-ballot races (even though a lot of money is being spent there). I'm sure I could find some surveys, as well as case stories, but Trump-Harris has so totally overshadowed them that I'd have to dig. And even though for most of my life, I've done just that, I feel little compulsion to do so right now.

  • Thomas B Edsall: [10-30] Let me ask a question we never had to ask before: A survey of "a wide range of scholars and political strategists," asking not who will win, but who will blamed by the losers.

  • Saleema Gul: [10-31] A community divided: With Gaza on their minds, Muslim and Arab Americans weigh their options ahead of election day: Such as they are, which isn't much.

  • John Herrman: Democrats are massively outspending the GOP on social media: "It's not even close -- $182 million to just $45 million, according to one new estimate." As I recall, Republicans were way ahead on social media in 2016 (with or without Russian contributions), and that was seen as a big factor. (But also, as I recall, Facebook's algorithms amplified Trump's hateful lies, while Democratic memes were deemed too boring to bother with.)

  • Ben Kamisar: [11-03] Nearly $1 billion has been spent on political ads over the last week. Most of this money, staggering amounts, is being spent on down-ballot races, including state referenda.

  • Howard Lisnoff: [11-01] We're in some deep shit: Now that's a clickbait title, as you have to click to get to anything specific, of which many subjects are possibilities. Turns out it's mostly about Jill Stein: not what you'd call an endorsement -- his own view is summed up in the Emma Goldman quote, "if voting changed anything they'd make it illegal" -- but using anti-Stein hysteria as a prism for exposing the vacuousness of the Democrats, as if Trump wasn't in the race at all (his name only appears once, in a quote about 2016). Links herein:

    • Matt Flegenheimer: [10-23] Jill Stein won't stop. No matter who asks. "People in Stein's life have implored her to abandon her bid for president, lest she throw the election to Donald Trump. She's on the ballot in almost every critical state." This piece is, naturally, totally about how she might siphon votes from Harris allowing Trump to win, with nothing about her actual positions, or how they contrast with those of Harris and Trump. Even Israel only gets a single offhand mention:

      Her bid can feel precision-engineered to damage Ms. Harris with key subgroups: young voters appalled by the United States' support for Israel; former supporters of Bernie Sanders's presidential campaigns who feel abandoned by Democrats; Arab American and Muslim voters, especially in Michigan, where fury at Ms. Harris and President Biden has been conspicuous for months.

      The Sanders comment seems like a totally gratuitous dig -- he is on record as solidly for Harris even considering Israel, and few of his supporters are likely to disagree. The other two points are the same, and have been widely debated elsewhere (including several links in this post), but the key thing there is that while Stein may benefit from their disaffection, she is not the cause of it. The cause is American support for genocide, which includes Biden and Harris, but also Trump, Kennedy, and nearly everyone in Congress.

    • Glenn Greenwald: Kamala's worst answers yet? A 38:31 video with no transcript, something I have zero interest in watching, although the comments are suitably bizarre (most amusing: "Consequences of an arrogant oligarchy and descending empire").

  • Dan Mangan: [11-02] Shock poll shows Harris leading Trump in Iowa. An exception to my "no polls stories" policy. My wife mentioned this poll to me, as a possible reason to vote for Harris in Kansas where she had been planning on a write-in.

  • Parker Molloy: [11-04] We already know one big loser in this election: the mainstream media: "When your most loyal supporters start questioning your integrity, that's not just a red flag -- it's a siren blaring in the newsroom."

  • Clara Ence Morse/Luis Melgar/Maeve Reston: [10-28] Meet the megmadonors pumping over $2.5 billion into the election: The breakdown of the top 50 is $1.6B Republican, $752M Democratic, with $214M "supportive of both parties" (mostly crypto and realtor groups). The top Democratic booster is Michael Bloomberg, but his $47.4M this time is a drop in the bucket compared to the money he spent in 2020 to derail Bernie Sanders.

  • Nicole Narea: [11-01] 2024 election violence is already happening: "How much worse could it get if Trump loses?" I'm more worried about: how much worse could it get if Trump wins? It's not just frustration that drives violence. There's also the feeling that you can get away with it -- one example of which is the idea that Trump will pardon you, as he's already promised to the January 6 hoodlums. Nor should we be too sanguine in thinking that frustration violence can only come from the right. While rights are much more inclined to violence, anyone can get frustrated and feel desperate, and the right has offered us many examples of that turning violent.

  • Margaret Simons: [11-02] Can democracy work without journalism? With the US election upon us, we may be about to find out: "Most serious news organisations are not serving the politically disengaged, yet it's these voters who will decide the next president." Seems like a good question, but much depends on what you mean by journalism. Although I have many complaints about quality, quantity doesn't seem to be much of a problem -- except, as compared to the quantity of PR, which is over the top, and bleeding into everything else. As for "soon find out," I doubt that. While honest journalism should have decided this election several months ago, the commonplace that we're now facing a "toss up" suggests that an awful lot of folks have been very poorly informed. Either that, or they don't give a fuck -- (not about their votes, but about what consequences they may bring -- which is a proposition that is hard to dismiss. There are many things that I wish reporters would research better, but Donald Trump isn't one of them.

  • Jeffrey St Clair: [11-01] Notes on a phony campaign: strange days.

  • Margaret Sullivan: [11-04] The candidates' closing campaign messages could not be more different: Well, aside from automatic support for America's global war machine, extending even to genocide in Israel, and the unexamined conviction that "the business of America is business," and that government's job is to promote that business everywhere. But sure, there are differences enough to decide a vote on: "There is hateful rhetoric and threats of retribution from one side, and messages of inclusion and good will from the other." But haven't we seen this "bad cop, good cop" schtick before? Or "speak softly, but carry a big stick"? These are the sort of differences that generate a lot of heat, but very little light.

  • Zoe Williams: [10-31] An excess of billionaires is destabilising politics -- just as academics predicted: "Politicians have always courted the wealthy, but Elon Musk and co represent a new kind of donor, and an unprecedented danger to democracy."

  • Endorsements:

Trump:

  • The New Republic: [10-21] The 100 worst things Trump has done since descending that escalator: "Some were just embarrassing. Many were horrific. All of them should disqualify him from another four years in the White House." I ran this last week, but under the circumstances let's run it again. If I had the time, I'm pretty sure I'd be able to write up 20+ more, many of which would land in the top 20. For instance, Israel only merits 2 mentions, at 76 and 71, and the latter was more about him attacking George Soros: no mention of moving the embassy to Jerusalem, or many other favors that contributed to the Oct. 7 revolt and genocide. Ditching the Iran deal came in at 8, but no mention of assassinating Iranian general Qasem Soleimani (I hope I don't need to explain why). There is only one casual reference to Afghanistan (22. Escalates the drone war), none that he protracted the war four years, knowing that Biden would be blamed for his surrender deal to the Taliban. He gets chided for his being "pen pals with Kim Jong Un," but not for failing to turn his diplomacy into an actual deal. Not all of these items belong in a Trivial Pursuit game, but most would be overshadowed by real policy disasters if reporters could look beyond their Twitter feeds.

  • Zack Beauchamp: [11-02] It's not alarmist: A second Trump term really is an extinction-level threat to democracy: "Why a second Trump term is a mortal threat to democracy -- though perhaps not the way you think." Having written a recent book -- The Reactionary Spirit: How America's Most Insidious Political Tradition Swept the World (I bought a copy, but haven't gotten into it yet -- on this broad theme, he predictably offers us a rehash with a minor update. It's nice to see him dialing back the alarmism, enough to see the real longer-term erosion:

    If the first Trump term was akin to the random destruction of a toddler, a second would be more like the deliberate demolition of a saboteur. With the benefit of four years of governing experience and four more years of planning, Trump and his team have concluded that the problem with their first game of Jenga was that they simply did not remove enough of democracy's blocks.

    I do not think that, over the course of four more years, Trump could use these plans to successfully build a fascist state that would jail critics and install himself in power indefinitely. This is in part because of the size and complexity of the American state, and in part because that's not really the kind of authoritarianism that works in democracies nowadays.

    But over the course of those years, he could yank out so many of American democracy's basic building blocks that the system really could be pushed to the brink of collapse. . . .

    A second Trump term risks replacing Rawls's virtuous cycle with a vicious one. As Trump degrades government, following the Orbánist playbook with at least some success, much of the public would justifiably lose their already-battered faith in the American system of government. And whether it could long survive such a disaster is anyone's guess.

    While "toddler" is certainly apt, eight years later he hasn't changed that aspect much, and in many ways he's even regressed. His narcissistic petulance is ever more pronounced, which may be why many people dismiss the threat of a second term as hysteria. No matter how naughty he wants to be, even as president he can't do all that much damage on his own. He looks like, and sounds like, the same deranged blowhard he's always been, but one thing is very different this time: he and his activist cult have found each other. As president, he will empower them from day one, and they'll not only do things he can only dream of, but they will feed him new fantasies, carefully tailored to flatter him and his noxious notions of greatness, because they know, as we all should realize by now, that job one is stoking his ego.

    No doubt much of what they try will blow up before it causes real harm -- nobody thinks that, even with a Republican Senate, Big Pharma is going to let RFK Jr. destroy their vaccination cash cow -- and much of what does get promulgated and/or enacted will surely blow back, driving his initially record-low approval rates into the ground. But he knows better than to let GOP regulars construct "guard rails" with responsible "adults in the room." The loyalty of everyone he might hire now can be gauged by their track record -- both what they've said in the past, and how low they can bow and scrape now (Vance is an example of the latter, of how to redeem yourself in Trump's eyes, although I'd surmise that Trump's still pretty wary of him).

    PS: Here's a video of Beauchamp talking about his book: The realignment: The rise of reactionary politics.
  • Aaron Blake: [11-01] Trump's latest violent fantasy: "Trump keeps painting pictures of violence against his foes despite allegations of fascism. And Republicans keep shrugging."

  • Sidney Blumenthal: [11-02] Donald Trump's freakshow continues unabated: "Trump insists on posing as the salient question of the election: are you crazier today than you were four years ago?"

  • Kevin T Dugan: [11-01] Wall Street's big bet on a Trump win: "Gold, bitcoin, prisons, and oil are all thought to be the big moneymakers for the financial class if Trump wins another term." More compelling reasons to sink Trump.

  • Michelle Goldberg: [11-01] What I truly expect if an unconstrained Trump retakes power.

  • Steven Greenhouse: [10-30] Trump wants you to believe that the US economy is doing terribly. It's untrue: "Despite his claims to the contrary, unemployment is low, inflation is way down, and job growth is remarkably strong." But unless you're rich, can you really tell? And if you're rich, the choice comes down to: if you merely want to get richer, you'd probably be better off with the Democrats (who have consistently produced significantly higher growth rates, ever since the Roaring '20s crashed and burned), but if you really want to feel the power that comes with riches, you can go with one of your own, and risk the embarrassment. And funny thing is, once you've decided which side you're on, your view of the economy will self-confirm. From any given vantage point, you can look up or down. That's a big part of the reason why these stories, while true enough, have virtually no impact (except among the neoliberal shills that write them).

  • Arun Gupta: [11-01] Triumph of the swill: A night at the Garden with Trump and MAGA. About as good a blow-by-blow account as I've seen so far. Ends on this note:

    Eight years wiser and with four years to plan, Trump, Miller, and the rest of MAGA are telling us they plan to occupy America. They are itching to use the military to terrify, subjugate, and ethnically cleanse. The only liberation will be for their violent desires and that of their Herrenvolk who went wild at mentions of mass deportations. They loved the idea.

    Also by Gupta:

    • [10-29] Night of the Fash: "At Madison Square Garden with Trump and his lineup of third-rate grifters and bigots." An earlier, shorter draft.

    • [11-04] Kamala says she'll "end the war in Gaza": "For opponents of Israel's genocide, sticking to principles gets results. But for Harris, her flip-flop is a sign of desperation." I don't really believe her -- it's going to take more than a sound bite to stand up to the Israel lobby -- but I would welcome the sentiment, and not just make fun of her. It may be desperate, but it's also a tiny bit of timely hope, much more plausible than the magic Trump imagines.

  • Margaret Hartmann: [11-01] Trump's ties to Jeffrey Epstein: Everything we've learned: "Michael Wolff claims he has Epstein tapes about Trump, and saw compromising Trump photos."

  • Antonia Hitchens:

    • [11-03] Trump's final days on the campaign trail: "Under assault from all sides, in the last weeks of his campaign, the former President speaks often of enemies from within, including those trying to take his life."

    • [10-19] Inside the Republican National Committee's poll-watching army: "The RNC says it has recruited tens of thousands of volunteers to observe the voting process at precincts across the country. Their accounts of alleged fraud could, as one Trump campaign official put it, "establish the battlefield" for after November 5th."

  • Chris Hooks: [11-02] The brainless ideas guiding Trump's foreign policy: "Conservatives recently gathered in Washington to explain how they would rule the world in a second Trump term. The result was incoherent, occasionally frightening, and often very dumb." My first reaction was that one could just as easily write "The brainless ideas guiding Democrats' foreign policy," but then I saw that the author is referring to a specific conference, the Richard Nixon Foundation's "Grand Strategy Summit."

  • Marina Hyde: [11-01] Trump may become president again -- but he's already a useful idiot to the mega rich: "They make nice with him when it suits, ridicule him when he's not listening. Their lives are money and gossip -- with him they get both."

  • Ben Jacobs: [11-04] The evolving phenomenon of the Trump rally: "Rarely boring, always changing, and essential to his appeal."

  • Hannah Knowles/Marianne LeVine/Isaac Arnsdorf: [11-01] Trump embraces violent rhetoric, suggests Liz Cheney should have guns 'trained on her face': "The GOP nominee often describes graphic and gruesome scenes of crimes and violence, real and imagined."

  • Eric Levitz: [11-01] Elon Musk assures voters that Trump's victory would deliver "temporary hardship"; "And he's half right." Meaning the hardship, but not necessarily "temporarily":

    Now, as the race enters the homestretch, Musk is trying to clinch Trump's victory with a bracing closing argument: If our side wins, you will experience severe economic pain.

    If elected, Trump has vowed to put Musk in charge of a "government efficiency commission," which would identify supposedly wasteful programs that should be eliminated or slashed. During a telephone town hall last Friday, Musk said his commission's work would "necessarily involve some temporary hardship."

    Days later, Musk suggested that this budget cutting -- combined with Trump's mass deportation plan -- would cause a market-crashing economic "storm." . . .

    This is one of the more truthful arguments that Musk has made for Trump's election, which is to say, only half of it is false. If Trump delivers on his stated plans, Americans will indeed suffer material hardship. But such deprivation would neither be necessary for -- nor conducive to -- achieving a healthier or more sustainable economy.

    After discussing tariffs and mass deportation, Levitz offer a section on "gutting air safety, meat inspections, and food stamps will not make the economy healthier." He then offers us a silver lining:

    Trump's supporters might reasonably argue that none of this should trouble us, since he rarely fulfills his campaign promises and will surely back away from his economically ruinous agenda once in office. But "don't worry, our candidate is a huge liar" does not strike me as a much better message than "prepare for temporary hardship."

  • Nicholas Liu: [10-31] Trump nearly slips attempting to enter a garbage truck for a campaign stunt.

  • Carlos Lozada: [10-31] Donald and Melania Trump were made for each other: Basically a review of her book, Melania. The title could just as well read "deserve each other," but that suggests a measure of equality that has never been remotely true.

    Melania's relationship with Donald is among the book's haziest features. She depicts her initial attraction to him in superficial terms: She was "captivated by his charm," was "drawn to his magnetic energy" and appreciated his "polished business look." He was not "flashy or dramatic," she writes, but "down-to-earth." And though we know how he speaks about women in private, Melania writes that "in private, he revealed himself as a gentleman, displaying tenderness and thoughtfulness." The one example she offers of his thoughtfulness is a bit unnerving: "Donald to this day calls my personal doctor to check on my health, to ensure that I am OK and that they are taking perfect care of me."

  • Clarence Lusane: [10-31] The black case against Donald Trump: "Hold Trump accountable for a lifetime of anti-black racism."

  • Branko Marcetic: [10-31] 'Anti-war' Trump trying to outflank Harris at critical moment: "It may be a cynical strategy, but he seems to have read the room while she has chosen a more confused, if not hawkish, path." This has long been my greatest worry in the election.

  • Amanda Marcotte:

  • Peter McLaren: [11-03] Donald Trump versus a microphone: a head bobbing performance.

  • Jan-Werner Müller: [11-04] What if Trump's campaign is cover for a slow-motion coup? "Even if Trump can't really mobilize large numbers of people to the streets, just prolonging a sense of chaos might be enough." Why are people so pre-occupied with imagining present and future threats that have already happened? I'm sorry to have to break the news to you, especially given that you think the election tomorrow is going to be so momentous, but the "slow motion coup" has already happened. Trump, while easily the worst imaginable outcome, is just the farce that follows tragedy. The polarization isn't driven by issues, but by personality types. A lot of people will vote for Trump not because they agree with him, but because in a rigged system, he's the entertainment option. He will make the other people suffer -- his very presence drives the rest of us crazy -- and Trump voters get off on that. And a lot of people will vote against him, because they don't want to suffer, or in some rare cases, they simply don't like seeing other people suffer. Harris, actually much more than Biden or Obama or either Clinton, is a very appealing candidate for those people (I can say us here), but is still can be trusted not to try to undo the coup, to restore any measure of real democracy, let alone "power to the people."

    Here's a way to look at it: skipping past 1776-1860, there have been two eras in American history, each beginning in revolution, but which fizzled in its limited success, allowing reaction to set in, extending the power of the rich to a breaking point. The first was the Civil War and Reconstruction, which gave way to rampant corruption, the Gilded Age and Jim Crow, ultimately collapsing in the Great Depression. The second was the New Deal, which came up with the idea of countervailing powers and a mixed economy with a large public sector, mitigating the injustices of laissez-faire while channeling the energy of capitalism into building a widely shared Affluent Society.

    But, unlike the Marxist model of proletarian revolution, the New Deal left the upper crust intact, and during WWII they learned how to use government for their own means. The reaction started to gain traction after Republicans won Congress in 1946, and teamed with racist Democrats to pass Taft-Hartley and other measures, which eventually undermined union power, giving businesses a freer hand to run things. Then came the Red Scare and the Cold War, which Democrats joined as readily as Republicans, not realizing it would demolish their popular base. Dozens of similar milestones followed, each designed to concentrate wealth and power, which both parties increasingly catered to, seeing no alternative, and comforted with the perks of joining the new plutocracy.

    One key milestone was the end of the "fairness doctrine" in the 1980s, which surrendered the notion that there is a public interest as opposed to various private interests, and incentivized moguls to buy up media companies and turn them into propaganda networks (most egregiously at Fox, but really everywhere). Another was the end of limits on campaign finance, which has finally reduced electoral politics to an intramural sport of billionaires. (Someone should issue a set of billionaire trading cards, like baseball cards, with stats and stories on the back. I googled, and didn't find any evidence of someone doing this.) Aside from Bernie Sanders, no one runs for president (or much else) without first lining up a billionaire (or at least a near-wannabe). They have about as much control over who gets taken seriously and can appear on a ballot as the Ayatollah does in Iran.

    The main thing that distinguishes this system from a coup is that it's unclear who's ultimately in charge, or even if someone is. Still, that could be a feature, especially as it allows for an infinite series of scapegoats when things go wrong -- as, you may have noticed, they inevitably do.

  • Nicholas Nehamas/Erica L Green: [10-31] Trump says he'll protect women, 'like it or not,' evoking his history of misogyny.

  • Jonathan O'Connell/Leigh Ann Caldwell/Lisa Rein: [11-02] Conservative group's 'watch list' targets federal employees for firing.

  • Andrew Prokop: [09-26] The Architect: Stephen Miller's dark agenda for a second Trump term: "Miller has spent years plotting mass deportation. If Trump wins, he'll put his plans into action." I think the most important thing to understand about Miller isn't how malevolent he is, but that he's the archetype, the exemplar for all future Trump staff. He clearly has his own deep-seated agenda, but what he's really excelled at is binding it to Trump, mostly through utterly shameless flattery.

  • Aaron Regunberg: [11-01] Why is the Anti-Defamation League running cover for Trump? "Yes, it's fair to compare Trump's Madison Square Guarden spectacle to the Nazi rally of 1939."

  • Aja Romano/Anna North: [11-05] The new Jeffrey Epstein tapes and his friendship with Trump, explained.

  • Dylan Scott: [10-30] The existential campaign issue no one is discussing: "What happens if another pandemic strikes -- and Trump is the president." Mentions bird flu (H5N1) as a real possibility, but given Trump's worldview and personal quirks, one could rephrase this as: what happens if any unexpected problem strikes? I'm not one inclined to look to presidents for leadership or understanding, but the least we should expect is the third option in "lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way." Trump is almost singularly incapable of any of those three options. Moreover, where most people manage to learn things from experience, Trump jumps to the wrong conclusions. Case in point: when Trump got Covid-19 in 2016, he could have learned from the experience how severe the illness is, and how devastating it could be for others; instead, he recovered, through treatment that wasn't generally available, and came out of it feeling invincible, holding superspreader events and ridiculing masks. I've long believed that a big part of his polling bounce was due to people foolishly mistaking his idiocy for bravura.

  • Marc Steiner: [10-30] The failures of liberals and the left have helped Trump's rise: "Feckless Democrats and a disorganized Left have fed fuel to the MAGA movement's fire." Interview with Bill Fletcher Jr. and Rick Perlstein.

  • Kirk Swearingen: [11-02] Donald Trump was never qualified to be president -- or anything else: "After a lifetime of lying, failure and incompetence, this conman stands at the gates of power once again."

  • Michael Tomasky: [11-04] Donald Trump has lost his sh*t: "There is no 'context' for performing fellatio on a microphone. He's gone batty. The only remaining question is whether enough voters recognize it."

Vance, and other Republicans:

Harris:

  • Eric Levitz: [10-22] If Harris loses, expect Democrats to move right: "Even though Harris is running as a moderate, progressives are likely to get blamed for her defeat." I haven't read this, as it's locked up as a "special feature for Vox Members," but the headline is almost certainly wrong, and the subhed is very disputable -- I've already seen hundreds of pieces arguing that if Harris fails, it will be because she moved too far to the right, and in doing so risked discredit of principles that actually resonate more with voters. (And if she wins, it will be because she didn't cut corners like that on abortion, but stuck to a strong message.) No doubt, if she loses, the Democrats and "centrist" who never miss a chance to slam the left will do so again -- you can already see this in the Edsall piece, op. cit. -- but how credible will they be this time? (After, e.g., trying to blame first Sanders then Putin for Hillary Clinton's embarrassing failure in 2016.)

    If Harris loses, she will be pilloried for every fault from every angle, which may be unfair, but is really just a sign of the times, a rough measure of the stakes. But if Trump wins, the debate about who to blame is going to become academic real fast. Republicans are not going to see a divided nation they'd like to heal with conciliatory gestures. They're going to plunge the knife deeper, and twist it. And as they show us what the right really means, they will drive lots of people to the left, to the people who first grasp what was going wrong, and who first organized to defend against the right. And the more Trump and his goons fuck up (and they will fuck up, constantly and cluelessly), the more people will see the left as prescient and principled. The left has a coherent analysis of what's gone wrong, and what can and should be done about it. They've been held back by the centrists -- the faction that imagines they can win by appealing to the better natures of the rich while mollifying the masses with paltry reforms and panic over the right -- but loss by Harris, following Clinton's loss, will leave them even more discredited.

    As long-term politics, one might even argue that a Trump win would be the best possible outcome for the left. No one (at least, no one I know of) on the left is actually arguing that, largely because we are sensitive enough to acute pain we wish to avoid even the early throes of fascist dictatorship, and possibly because we don't relish natural selection winnowing our leadership down to future Lenins and Stalins. But when you see Republicans as odious as Bret Stephens and George Will endorsing Harris, you have to suspect that they suspect that what I'm saying is true.

  • Stephen Prager/Alex Skopic: [11-01] Every Kamala Harris policy, rated. This is a seriously important piece, the kind of things issues-oriented voters should be crying out for. But the platforms exists mostly to show that Harris is a serious issues-oriented candidate, and to give her things to point to when she pitches various specific groups. Anything that she wants will be further compromised when the donor/lobbyists and their hired help (aka Congress, but also most likely her Cabinet and their minions) get their hands on the actual proposals. Given that the practical voting choice is just between Harris and Trump, that seems like a lot of extra work -- especially the parts, like everything having to do with foreign policy, that will only make you more upset.

    Nathan J Robinson introduced this piece with an extended tweet, making the obvious contrasts to Trump ("a nightmare on another level"). I might as well unroll his post here:

    The differences between a Trump and Harris presidency: An unprecedented deportation program with armed ICE agents breaking down doors and tearing families from their homes in unfathomable numbers, total right-wing capture of the court system, ending every environmental protection.

    Workplace safety rules will be decimated (remember, the right doesn't believe you should have water breaks in the heat), Israel will be given a full green light to "resettle" Gaza, all federal efforts against climate change will cease, international treaties will be ripped up . . .

    There will be a war on what remains of abortion rights (if you believe the right won't try to ban it federally you're the world's biggest sucker), protests will be ruthlessly cracked down on (with the military probably, as Tom Cotton advocated), journalists might be prosecuted . . .

    Organized labor's progress will be massively set back, with Trump letting policy be dictated by billionaire psychopaths like Elon Musk who think workers are serfs. JD Vance endorsed a plan for a massive war on teachers' unions. Public health will be overseen by RFK antivaxxers . . .

    If you think things cannot be worse, I would encourage you to expand your imagination. Trump is surrounded by foaming-at-the-mouth authoritarians who believe they are in a war for the soul of civilization and want to annihilate the left. I am terrified and you should be too.

Walz, Biden, and other Democrats:

  • Ana Marie Cox: [11-01] Tim Walz has broken Tucker Carlson's brain: "The former Fox News host is so flummoxed by Kamala Harris's running mate that he's resorting to immature, homophobic schoolyard taunts."

  • Ralph Nader: [11-04] The Democratic Party still can adopt winning agendas. Obviously, the "there is still time" arguments are finally moot for 2024, not that the principles are wrong. This makes me wonder what would have happened had Nader run as a Democrat in 2000, instead of on a third party. Sure, Gore would have won most of the primaries, but he could have gotten a sizable chunk of votes, possibly nudged Gore left of Lieberman and Clinton, and if Gore still lost, set himself up for an open run in 2004.

Supreme Court, legal matters, and other crimes:

Climate and environment:

Business, labor, and Economists:

Ukraine and Russia:

Elsewhere in the world and/or/in spite of America's empire:


Other stories:

  • Victoria Chamberlin: [11-02] How Americans came to hate each other: "And how we can make it stop." Interview between Noel King and Lilliana Mason, author of Uncivil Agreement: How Politics Became Our Identity (2018), and Radical American Partisanship (2022, with Nathan P Kalmoe). She seems to have a fair amount of data, but not much depth. There is very little hint here that the polarization is asymmetrical. While both sides see the other as treats to their well-being, the nature of those threats are wildly different, as are the remedies (not that the promise of is in any way delivered).

  • Ezra Klein: [11-01] Are we on the cusp of a new political order? Interview with Gary Gerstle, author of The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order: America and the World in the Free Market Era. I've noted him as a "big picture" historian, but I've never read him. But he makes a fair amount of sense in talking about neoliberalism here, even though I resist rooting it my beloved New Left. But I can see his point that a focus on individual freedom and a critique of the institutions of the liberal power elite could have served the reactionaries, not least by pushing some liberals (notably Charles Peters) to refashion themselves, which proved useful for Democratic politicians from Jimmy Carter on. This sort of dovetails with my argument that the New Left was a massive socio-cultural success, winning major mind share on all of its major fronts (against war and racism, for women and the environment) without ever seizing power, which was deeply distrusted. That failure, in part because working class solidarity was discarded as Old Left thinking, allowed the reactionaries to bounce back, aided by neoliberals, who helped them consolidate economic power.

    Gerstle offers this quote from Jimmy Carter's 1978 state of the union address:

    Government cannot solve our problems. It can't set our goals. It cannot define our vision. Government cannot eliminate poverty or provide a bountiful economy or reduce inflation or save our cities or cure illiteracy or provide energy. And government cannot mandate goodness.

    One thing I'm struck by here is that four of these sentences immediately strike us as plausible, given how little trust we still have in government -- a trust which, one should stress, was broken by the Vietnam War. However, the other sentence is plainly false, and Carter seems to be trying to pull a fast one on us, disguising a pretty radical curtailment of functions that government is the only remedy for: eliminating poverty (spreading wealth and power), providing a bountiful economy (organizing fair markets and making sure workers are paid enough to be consumers), reducing inflation, saving cities, curing illiteracy (schools), providing energy (TVA, for example; more privatization here, not the best of solutions, but kept in check by regulation -- until it wasn't, at which point you got Enron, which blew up).

    But once you realize you're being conned, go back and re-read the paragraph again, and ask why? It's obvious that government can solve problems, because it does so all the time. The question is why doesn't it solve more problems? And the answer is often that it's being hijacked by special interests, who pervert it for their own greed (or maybe just pride). Setting goals, defining vision, and mandating goodness are less tangible, which moves them out of the normal functioning of government. But such sentences only make sense if you assume that government is an independent entity, with its own peculiar interests, and not simply an instrument of popular will. If government works for you, why can't it promote your goals, vision, and goodness? Maybe mandates (like the "war on drugs") are a step too far, because democracies should not only reflect the will of the majority but also must respect and tolerate the freedom of others.

  • Elizabeth Kolbert: [2017-02-19] Why facts don't change our minds: An old piece, seemingly relevant again."

Obituaries

Books

  • Ta-Nehisi Coates: The Message: I'm finally reading this book, so linking it here was the easiest way to pick up the cover image. It took a while to get good, but the major section on Israel/Palestine is solid and forceful.

Music (and other arts?)

Chatter

  • Dean Baker: [11-03] quick, we need a major national political reporter to tell us Donald Trump is not suffering from dementia, otherwise people might get the wrong idea. [on post quoting Trump ("we always have huge crowds and never any empty seats") while panning camera on many empty seats.]

  • Jane Coaston: [11-04] Every white nationalist is convinced that almost every other person is also a white nationalist and that's a level of confidence in the popularity of one's views I do not understand.

    Rick Perlstein comments: I have a riff about that in my next book. I call it "epistemological narcissism": right-wingers can't imagine anyone could think differently than themselves. They, of coruse, only being different in having the courage to tell the truth . . .

  • Iris Demento: [11-05] Happy crippling anxiety day [followed by bullet list from 1972:

    • "Nixon Now" - Richard M. Nixon, 1972 (also, "Nixon Now, More than Ever" and "President Nixon. Now more than ever")
    • "Come home, America" - George McGovern, 1972
    • "Acid, Amnesty, and Abortion for All" - 1972 anti-Democratic Party slogan, from a statement made to reporter Bob Novak by Missouri Senator Thomas F. Eagleton (as related in Novak's 2007 memoir, Prince of Darkness)
    • "Dick Nixon Before He Dicks You" - Popular anti-Nixon slogan, 1972
    • "They can't lick our Dick" - Popular campaign slogan for Nixon supporters

    Remembering 1972, I contributed a comment:

    1972 was the first time I voted. I hated Nixon much more than I hate Trump today. (Not the word I would choose today; maybe I retired it after Nixon?) I voted for McGovern, and for Bill Roy, who ran a remarkable campaign against the hideous Bob Dole, and for Jim Juhnke against our dull Republican Rep. Garner Shriver. Those three were among the most decent and thoughtful people who ever ran for public office in these parts. I voted for whatever Republican ran against the horrible Vern Miller and his sidekick Johnny Darr. In a couple cases, I couldn't stand either D or R, so wasted my vote with the Prohibitionist (a minor party, but still extant in KS). Not a single person I voted for won. I was so despondent, I didn't vote again until 1996, when I couldn't resist the opportunity to vote against Dole again. (I was in MA at the time.) I've voted regularly since then. After moving back to KS in 1999, I got another opportunity to vote for whatever Republican ran against Vern Miller, and we beat him this time (although for the most part, my winning pct. remains pretty low).

  • Paul Krugman: [no link, but cited in a post called Trump could make contagion great again] I expect terrible things if Trump wins. Until recently, however, "explosive growth in infectious diseases" wasn't on my Bingo card [link to article on RFK Jr. saying "Trump promised him 'control' of HHS and USDA]


Local tags (these can be linked to directly): music.

Original count: 135 links, 9115 words

Current count: 160 links, 10343 words (13232 total)

Friday, November 01, 2024

Daily Log

I will shortly open up a draft file for one more Speaking of Which -- definitely the last before the November 5 election, and I can see a case for making it the last ever, although I doubt I'll go that far. Woke up this morning trying to reformulate my understanding of Donald Trump, perhaps spurred on by the two comments I received on the endorsement piece. Elias Vlanton wrote in:

We disagree about the election, and probably the nature of the two parties. I am voting Green, I would do so even in a battleground state. From what you wrote, I think the Republicans/Trump are not as evil as you think, and the Democrats are not as benign as you hope.

Laura Tillem filed the only comment so far:

You say: "Presumably she has researched the electorate and knows much better than I do just how to pitch them." I question this, I expect her neoliberal assumptions limit what she can learn about the electorate.

I responded with a comment of my own:

Assumptions always guide research, and bad assumptions can send it disastrously astray. But Harris, as opposed to someone like Chait, isn't an ideologist simply out to prove a point. She has a practical goal, to win the election, and she has the money to hire researchers to help her find out what she needs to say and do to win that election. And while some of those researchers may have sucked up to her to get the job, they surely know that they'll ultimately be judged on results -- on whether she wins the election. You and I have hunches and opinions, and they may on average be better than hers, but we don't have anything like the data she commands -- and presumably is learning from, and as such she may have learned things I haven't. We can second-guess each other until we turn blue, but nobody knows until they count the votes. At this stage, I see no better alternative than to trust her. After Tuesday, the wave of probabilities will collapse into a fact, and we'll all have to adjust accordingly.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Music Week

Expanded blog post, October archive (final).

Tweet: Music Week: 34 albums, 5 A-list

Music: Current count 43099 [43065] rated (+34), 41 [46] unrated (-5).


New records reviewed this week:

  • Amyl and the Sniffers: Cartoon Darkness (2024, B2B/Virgin): [sp]: A-
  • Jason Anick/Jason Yeager: Sanctuary (2023 [2024], Sunnyside): [cd]: B+(***)
  • The Attic & Eve Risser: La Grande Crue (2023 [2024], NoBusiness): [cd]: A-
  • David Bailis: Tree of Life (2024, Create or Destroy): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Dharma Down: Owl Dreams (2023 [2024], Dharma Down): [cd]: B+(*)
  • Etran De L'Aďr: 100% Saharan Guitar (2024, Sahel Sounds): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Joel Futterman: Innervoice (2024, NoBusiness): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Hinds: Viva Hinds (2024, Lucky Number): [sp]: A-
  • Shawneci Icecold/Vernon Reid/Matthew Garrison & Grant Calvin Weston: Future Prime (2024, Underground45): [cd]: B+(***)
  • J.U.S X Squadda B: 3rd Shift (2024, Bruiser Brigade): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Nick Lowe & Los Straitjackets: Indoor Safari (2024, Yep Roc): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Michael McNeill: Barcode Poetry (2022 [2024], Infrasonic Press): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Yuka Mito: How Deep Is the Ocean (2024, Nana Notes): [cd]: B
  • Mavis Pan: Rising (2023 [2024], self-released): [cd]: B+(*)
  • William Parker/Hugo Costa/Philipp Ernsting: Pulsar (2023 [2024], NoBusiness): [cd]: A-
  • Pest Control: Year of the Pest (2024, Quality Control HQ, EP): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Tyshawn Sorey Trio: The Suspectible Now (2024, Pi): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Ben Waltzer: The Point (2023 [2024], Calligram): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Immanuel Wilkins: Blues Blood (2024, Blue Note): [sp]: B+(**)

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

  • Arthur Blythe Quartet: Live From Studio Rivbea: July 6, 1976 (1976 [2024], NoBusiness): [cd]: B+(***)
  • Electro Throwdown: Sci-Fi Inter-Planetary Electro Attack on Planet Earth 1982-89 (1982-89 [2024], Soul Jazz): [r]: B+(**)
  • In the Beginning There Was Rhythm (1978-84 [2024], Soul Jazz): [sp]: B+(***)

Old music:

  • George Adams-Don Pullen Quartet: Jazzbühne Berlin '88 (1988 [1991], Repertoire): [yt]: A-
  • Ray Anderson: Harrisburg Half Life (1980 [1981], Moers Music): [yt]: B+(***)
  • Black Arthur Blythe: Bush Baby (1977 [1978], Adelphi): [yt]: B+(***)
  • Boombox 3: Early Independent Hip Hop, Electro and Disco Rap 1979-83 (1979-83 [2018], Soul Jazz, 2CD): [r]: B+(***)
  • Deutsche Elektronische Musik: Experimental German Rock and Electronic Musik 1972-83 (1972-83 [2010], Soul Jazz): [r]: B+(*)
  • Deutsche Elektronische Musik: Experimental German Rock and Electronic Musik 1972-83 (1971-83 [2013], Soul Jazz): [r]: B+(*)
  • Lloyd McNeill: Elegia (1979 [2019], Soul Jazz): [r]: B+(*)
  • Punk 45: I'm a Mess! D-I-Y or Die! Art, Trash & Neon: Punk 45s in the UK 1977-78 (1977-78 [2022], Soul Jazz): [r]: B+(**)
  • Space Funk 2: Afro Futurist Electro Funk in Space 1976-84 (1976-84 [2023], Soul Jazz): [r]: B+(**)
  • Wiener Art Orchester: Tango From Obango (1979 [1980], Art): [yt]: B+(***)


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • Big Bambi: Compositions for Bass Guitar & Bassoon, Vol. I (ESP-Disk) [09-27]
  • Steve Coleman and Five Elements: PolyTropos/Of Many Turns (Pi) [10-25]
  • Day Dream: Duke & Strays Live: Works by Duke Ellington & Billy Strayhorn (Corner Store Jazz, 2CD) [11-08]
  • David Friesen: A Light Shining Through (Origin) [11-22]
  • Al Jarreau: Wow! Live at the Childe Harold (1976, Resonance) [12-06]
  • Thollem McDonas: Infinite-Sum Game (ESP-Disk) [10-18]
  • Reut Regev's R*Time: It's Now: R*Time Plays Doug Hammond (ESP-Disk) [11-15]
  • Steve Smith and Vital Information: New Perspective (Drum Legacy) [02-07]
  • Dave Stryker: Stryker With Strings Goes to the Movies (Strikezone) [01-10]
  • Friso van Wijck: Friso van Wijck's Candy Container (TryTone) [11-01]

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Speaking of Which

Blog link.

File opened 2024-10-24 01:36 AM.

I've been trying to collect my thoughts and write my up Top 10 Reasons to Vote for Harris vs. Trump. I posted an early draft -- just the top 10 list -- on Monday afternoon at Notes on Everyday Life, then blanked out and didn't get to the second part ("Top 5 Reasons Electing Harris Won't Solve Our Problems") until Tuesday afternoon (and well into evening). I updated the NOEL draft that evening, and finally posted the file in the blog. That pushes this file out until Wednesday, and Music Week until Thursday (which still fits in October).

As of Tuesday evening, this week's collection is very hit-and-miss (100 links, 6023 words), typed up during odd breaks as I juggled my life between working on my birthday dinner, writing the endorsement, and struggling with my big remodeling project.

The endorsement could do with some editing, although my initial distribution of the link has thus far generated almost no comment (one long-time friend wrote back to disagree, having decided -- "even in a battleground state" -- to vote for Jill Stein). A year ago I still imagined writing a book that might have some small influence on the election. In some ways, this piece is my way of penance for my failure, but the more I got into it, the more I thought I had some worthwhile points to make. But now it's feeling like a complete waste of time.

The birthday dinner did feel like I accomplished something. The Burmese curries were each spectacular in their own way, the coconut rice nice enough, the ginger salad and vegetable sides also interesting, and the cake (not Burmese, but spice-and-oats) was an old favorite. I should follow it up with a second round of Burmese recipes before too long, especially now that I've secured the tea leaf salad ingredients.

Slow but tangible progress on the bedroom/closet remodel. Walls are painted now, leaving trim next. Paneling is up in closet, where I still have the ceiling and quite a bit of trim. [Wednesday morning now:] I've been meaning to go out back and polyurethane the trim boards, so I can cut them as needed, first to shore up the ceiling. But it's raining, so I'll give that pass for another day, and probably just work on this straggling post. Laura's report of morning news is full of gaffes by Biden and Hillary Clinton, who seem intent on redeeming the dead weight of their own cluelessness by imposing it on Harris. With "friends" like these, who needs . . . Dick Cheney?

Posting late Wednesday night, my usual rounds still incomplete. I'll decide tomorrow whether I'll add anything here, or simply move on to next week (which really has to post before election results start coming in). For now, I'm exhausted, and finding this whole process very frustrating.


Top story threads:

Israel:

  • Mondoweiss:

  • Ruwaida Kamal Amer/Ibtisam Mahdi: [10-24] For Gaza's schoolchildren, another year of destruction, loss, and uncertainty.

  • Tareq S Hajjaj: [10-25] Survivors of north Gaza invasion report Israeli 'extermination' campaign: "Survivors of the ongoing Israeli extermination campaign in north Gaza describe how the Israeli army is separating mothers from children before forcing them south, executing civilians in ditches, and directly targeting hospitals and medical staff."

  • Shatha Hanaysha: [10-25] 'Our freedom is close': why these young Palestinian men choose armed resistance: "I met resistance fighters from the Tulkarem Brigade for an interview in the alleyways of Tulkarem refugee camp in the occupied West Bank. They talked about why they fight against Israel, and what their dreams are for the future." This is disturbing. I find it impossible to feel solidarity or even sympathy with people who would fight back against Israel, even if purely out of self-defense. But it is understandable, and has long been predicted, every time Israel has renewed its war on Gaza (going back at least to 1951): virtually all people, when oppressed, will fight back. That they should do so, why and why, is mostly a function of the people who are driving them to such desperate measures. We'd see less of this if only we were clear on who is responsible for setting the conditions that make such rebellion seem like the only recourse, especially if we made it clear that we'll hold those who control an area as the sole ones responsible for the rebellions they provoke. Sure, I can think of some cases where control was nebulous and/or revolts were fueled by external forces, but that is not the case with Israel in Gaza. Israel is solely responsible for this genocide. And if armed resistance only accelerates it, that is solely because Israel wants it that way.

  • Gideon Levy: [10-25] Beatings, humiliation and torture: The IDF's night of terror at a Palestinian refugee camp: "Israeli soldiers abused people during a raid on a remote refugee camp in the territories. During their violent rampage, the troops detained 30 inhabitants, of whom 27 were released the next day."

  • Mohammed R Mhawish/Ola Al Asi/Ibrahim Mohammad: [10-23] Inside the siege of northern Gaza, where 'death waits around every corner': "Limbs scattered on the streets, shelters set ablaze, hundreds trapped inside hospitals: Palestinians detail the apocalyptic scenes of Israel's latest campaign."

  • Qassam Muaddi:

  • Jonathan Ofir: [10-28] Israeli journalists join the live-streamed genocide: "A mainstream Israeli journalist recently blew up a house in Lebanon as part of a news report while embedded with the military. The broadcast shows how mainstream genocidal activity has become in Israeli society."

  • Meron Rapoport:

  • Christiaan Triebert/Riley Mellen/Alexander Cardia: [10-30] Israel Demolished Hundreds of Buildings in Southern Lebanon, Videos and Satellite Images Show: "At least 1,085 buildings have been destroyed or badly damaged since Israel's invasion targeting the Hezbollah militia, including many in controlled demolitions, a New York Times analysis shows." Same tactics, reflecting the same threats and intentions Israel is using on Gaza, except that you can't even pretend to be responding to an attack like Oct. 7. Hezbollah is being targeted simply because it exists, and Lebanon is being targeted because Israelis make no distinction between the "militants" they "defend" against and any other person who lives in their vicinity. The numbers in Lebanon may not amount to genocide yet, but that's the model that Israel is following.

  • Oren Ziv: [10-22] 'Copy-paste the West Bank to Gaza': Hundreds join Gaza resettlement event: "In a closed military zone near Gaza, Israeli settlers, ministers, and MKs called to ethnically cleanse and annex the Strip -- an idea that is growing mainstream."

America's Israel (and Israel's America):

  • Yaniv Cogan/Jeremy Scahill: [10-21] The Israeli-American businessman pitching a $200 million plan to deploy mercenaries to Gaza: "Moti Kahana says he's talking to the Israeli government about creating a pilot program for 'gated communities' controlled by private US security forces." By the way, the authors also (separately) wrote:

    • Yaniv Cogan: [10-06] Blinken approved policy to bomb aid trucks, Israeli cabinet members suggest.

    • Jeremy Scahill/Murtaza Hussain/Sharif Abdel Kouddous: [09-18] Israel's new campaign of "terrorism warfare" across Lebanon.

    • Ryan Grim/Murtaza Hussain: [10-29] Project 2025 creators have a plan to 'dismantle' pro-Palestine movement: "If Donald Trump wins next week, the Heritage Foundation has prepared a roadmap for him to crush dissent."

      The plan, dubbed "Project Esther," casts pro-Palestinian activists in the U.S. as members of a global conspiracy aligned with designated terrorist organizations. As part of a so-called "Hamas Support Network," these protesters receive "indispensable support of a vast network of activists and funders with a much more ambitious, insidious goal -- the destruction of capitalism and democracy," Project Esther's authors allege.

      This conspiratorial framing is part of a legal strategy to suppress speech favorable to Palestinians or critical of the U.S.-Israel relationship, by employing counterterrorism laws to suppress what would otherwise be protected speech . . .

      To achieve its goals, Project Esther proposes the use of counterterrorism and hate speech laws, as well as immigration measures, including the deportation of students and other individuals in the United States on foreign visas for taking part in pro-Palestinian activities. It also advocates deploying the Foreign Agents Registration Act, a law placing disclosure obligations on parties representing foreign interests, against organizations that the report's authors imply are funded and directed from abroad.

      In addition, the document also suggests using the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, or RICO, to help construct prosecutions against individuals and organizations in the movement. The RICO act was originally created to fight organized crime in the U.S., and particularly mafia groups.

      It occurs to me that the same laws and tactics could be used to counter Israeli political influence -- that that anyone would try that -- and that the audit trail would be much more interesting.

  • Adrian Filut: [10-24] From Iron Dome to F-15s: US provides 70% of Israel's war costs.

  • Tariq Kenney-Shawa: [10-29] Why the Democrats were Israel's perfect partners in genocide: "By masking support for Israel with hollow humanitarian gestures and empathy for Palestinians have diluted pressure to end the war."

  • Akela Lacy: [10-24] How does AIPAC shape Washington? We tracked every dollar. "The Intercept followed AIPAC's money trail to reveal how its political spending impacts the balance of power in Congress."

  • Mitchell Plitnick: [10-25] US efforts to entice Israel into minimizing its attack on Iran are only raising the chances for regional war: "The Biden administration is showering Israel with military aid and support to persuade it not to hit Iran's energy sector, but this will only increase Israeli impunity and push the region closer to war."

  • Azadeh Shahshahahani/Sofía Verónica Montez: [02-26] Complicity in genocide -- the case against the Biden administration: "Israel's mass bombardment of civilians in Gaza is being facilitated, aided and abetted by the United States government." Older article I just noticed, but figured I'd note anyway. Reminds me that the only proper response to the "genocide" charge is to stop doing it. That at least enables the argument that you never meant the complete annihilation of everyone, because you stopped and left some (most?) target people still alive. Needless to say, the argument becomes less persuasive over time, where you've repeatedly missed opportunities to say this is enough, "we've made our point."

  • Richard Silverstein:

  • Ishaan Tharoor:

    • [10-25] Is Israel carrying out de facto ethnic cleansing? "A pro-settlement Israeli group and some Israeli lawmakers gathered a couple miles from northern Gaza's blasted neighborhoods to rally around settling Gaza."

    • [10-28] The world beyond the election: Middle East in turmoil: "Whoever takes office in January will face a region being reshaped by an emboldened Israel and the rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia."

    • [10-30] The world beyond the election: So much for democracy vs. autocracy. The Biden framing was mostly horseshit, mostly because America has never cared whether other countries practiced democracy, not least because we don't do a good job of it ourselves, and are certainly willing to throw it out the window if the polls look unfavorable. But also I suppose it was a subtle dig at Trump, who's always been Team Autocracy. That the ardor seems to have faded is less a change of view than acknowledgment that it hasn't worked so well. Then there is this line: "Biden once framed the successful defense of Ukraine as a rejection of a world 'where might makes right.'" But what is the US "defense" of Ukraine but an exercise in might making right? And if that case isn't clear cut enough for you, what else can you make of Israel?

Israel vs. world opinion:

Election notes:

Trump:

  • Trump's Madison Square Garden spectacle:

  • Zack Beauchamp: [10-31] Inside Trump's ominous plan to turn civil rights law against vulnerable Americans. Late-breaking but important article.

  • Jasper Craven: Trump's cronies threw the VA into chaos. Millions of veterans' lives are on the line again.

  • David French: [10-27] Four lessons from nine years of being 'Never Trump': His section heads:

    • Community is more powerful than ideology.
    • We don't know our true values until they're tested.
    • Hatred is the prime motivating force in our politics.
    • Finally, trust is tribal.
  • Susan B Glasser: [10-18] How Republican billionaires learned to love Trump again: "The former President has been fighting to win back his wealthiest donors, while actively courting new ones -- what do they expect to get in return?"

    Trump's effort to win back wealthy donors received its biggest boost on the evening of May 30th, when he was convicted in Manhattan on thirty-four criminal counts related to his efforts to conceal hush-money payments to the former adult-film actress Stormy Daniels. After the verdict, Trump walked out to the cameras in the courthouse and denounced the case brought against him as "rigged" and a "disgrace." Then he departed in a motorcade of black Suburbans. He was headed uptown for an exclusive fund-raising dinner, at the Fifth Avenue apartment of the Florida sugar magnate José (Pepe) Fanjul. . . .

    Trump was seated at the head table, between Fanjul -- a major Republican donor going back to the early nineties -- and Stephen Schwarzman, the C.E.O. of Blackstone, the world's largest private-equity fund, who had endorsed Trump the previous Friday. Securing the support of Schwarzman was a coup for the Trump campaign. . . .

    Trump was fund-raising off his conviction with small-dollar donors as well; his campaign, which portrayed him as the victim of a politicized justice system, brought in nearly $53 million in the twenty-four hours after the verdict. Several megadonors who had held back from endorsing Trump announced that they were now supporting him, including Miriam Adelson, the widow of the late casino mogul Sheldon Adelson; the Silicon Valley investor David Sacks, who said that the case against Trump was a sign of America turning into a "Banana Republic"; and the venture capitalist Shaun Maguire, who, less than an hour after the verdict, posted on X that he was donating $300,000 to Trump, calling the prosecution a "radicalizing experience." A day later, Timothy Mellon, the banking-family scion, wrote a $50-million check to the Make America Great Again super PAC.

    Many more names and dollar amounts follow.

  • Margaret Hartmann: [10-29] Melania Trump plays normal political wife for one week only: "From appearing at Donald Trump's racist MSG rally to insisting he's 'not Hitler' on Fox News, Melania is now conspicuously present."

  • Doug Henwood: [10-30] Trumponomics: "What kind of economic policy could we expect from a second Trump term?" A fairly obvious assignment for one of our more available left-wing economists, but he comes up with surprisingly little here, beyond income tax cuts and tariffs -- much-advertised themes that are unlikely to amount to very much. I suspect this is mostly because, despite the obvious importance of the economy, there isn't much of a partisan divide on how to run it. Trump would be harder on workers (especially on unions), and softer on polluters and all manner of frauds, but those are just relative shifts of focus. He would also shift public spending away from things that might be useful, like infrastructure, to "defense," including his "beautiful wall."

  • Michael Isikoff: [10-28] Trump campaign worker blows whistle on 'grift' and bugging plot: "A bombshell email claims millions were funneled from campaign to 'overcharging' firms -- and some went to a top Kamala Harris donor."

  • Robert Kuttner: [10-30] Why so much hate? "Trump has tapped into an undercurrent of crude hatred and encouraged his supporters to express it. Where does all this hate come from?"

  • Steven Levitsky/Daniel Ziblatt: [] There are four anti-Trump pathways we failed to take. There is a fifth. Authors of two books that have many liberal fans -- How Democracies Die (2018), and Tyranny of the Minority: Why American Democracy Reached the Breaking Point (2023) -- but never struck me as worth investigating, partly because their interest in democracy seems more concerned with formal elegance than with making government serve the people. The fifth path, when various legal schemes fail, is "societal mobilization" -- isn't that what we used to call "revolution"? The authors have written several "guest essays" over the years, including:

  • Nick Licata: [10-29] Trump's playbook to win regardless of election night results.

  • Nicholas Liu: [10-30] RFK Jr. claims Trump promised him "control" of CDC and federal health care agencies.

  • Amanda Marcotte:

  • Nicole Narea: [10-29] Would Trump's mass deportation plan actually work? "Here's what history tells us." Related here:

  • The New Republic: [10-21] The 100 worst things Trump has done since descending that escalator: "Some were just embarrassing. Many were horrific. All of them should disqualify him from another four years in the White House."

  • Timothy Noah:

  • Paige Oamek: [10-15] Trump's campaign manager has raked in an insane amount of money: "How in the world did Chris LaCivita make this much money from a campaign?"

  • Rick Perlstein: [10-30] What will you do? "Life-changing choices we may be forced to make if Donald Trump wins."

  • Molly Redden/Andy Kroll/Nick Surgey: [10-29] Inside a key MAGA leader's plans for a new Trump agenda: "Key Trump adviser says a Trump administration will seek to make civil servants miserable in their jobs." Spotlight here on Russell Vought, "former acting director of the Office of Management and Budget." Also on Vought:

  • James Risen:

    • [10-25] Mainstream media was afraid to compare Trump to Hitler. Now the press has no excuse. "Statements by John Kelly, Trump's former chief of staff, have made it nearly impossible for the media to avoid Hitler comparisons." Kelly's comments did pop up among the late show comics, but I wouldn't expect much more.

    • [10-22] Americans need a closing argument against Trump: "Too many Americans seem to be ignoring the risks that another Trump presidency would pose to the US. This is a warning to them." Included here because the author casually mentions: "Trump is a fascist who wants to overthrow the United States' democratic system of government." That's under the first section here, which is just one of several:

      1. Threat to democracy
      2. Imprison political opponents
      3. Eliminate reproductive rights
      4. Concentration camps and mass deportations for immigrants
      5. Create a theocracy
      6. Increase censorship and destroy the media
      7. A puppet for Putin
      8. Dictator for life

      Actually, I don't see many of these things happening, even if Republicans take Congress, and the last two are total canards. No one aspires to be a puppet, but aside from that, the rest are at least things Trump might think of and wish for. What separates Trump from the classic fascists has less to do with thought and desire than with checks and balances that make it hard for any president to get much of anything done. Still, a bad president can do a lot of damage, and any would-be fascist is certain to be a very bad president. As Trump has already proven, so we really shouldn't have to relitigate this.

    • [10-03] The reason Netanyahu and Putin both want a Trump victory: "Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu both want Donald Trump to win so they can prolong and intensify their brutal wars."

  • Asawin Suebsaeng/Tim Dickinson: 'American death squads': Inside Trump's push to make police more violent.

  • Sean Wilentz: Trump's plot against America: "A leading historian looks back at Philip Roth's novel and how it perfectly predicts the rise of Trump and his willing collaborators."

  • No More Mr. Nice Blog:

    • [10-28] It's world-historical fascism, but it's also ordinary white-guy bigotry.

      Did yesterday's rally seem like the work of an organized, dangerous fascist party? Yes -- but the rally's rhetoric also seemed like ordinary casual conversation among bigoted white men when they think no one can hear them. Remember the cops who beat Rodney King in 1991 and sent messages to one another describing Black citizens involved in a domestic dispute as being "right out of 'Gorillas in the Mist'"? Remember the police official responsible for investigating workplace harassment in New York City being fired in 2021 after it was revealed that he'd written racist posts in a police discussion group called the Rant? . . .

      This is how bigoted men talk. Among cops, it reinforces a sense of grievance that often leads to brutality. It'll do the same thing among Trumpers if they win -- and, to a lesser extent, if they lose. This is a rising fascist movement, but it's built on ordinary hatreds that aren't new and that predate Trump's political career.

    • [10-24] Fascism and other matters.

    • [20-21] Donald Trump, relatable fuckup?

      I think young men find Trump's campaign-trail lapses relatable. It's not just that they might really believe Haitians in America are eating people's pets, or might enjoy Trump's smutty anecdotes. I think they also might notice that Trump is being accused of campaign incompetence or dementia -- and that endears him more to them.

      After all, many of them were diagnosed with ADHD because they couldn't sit still in school or stop disrupting class. They might not like Trump's taste in music, but they can relate to someone who shows up and just doesn't feel like doing the work.

      They appreciate the way Trump suggests that he not only can solve all the world's problems, but can do it quickly and easily -- he conveys a sense that he can succeed at many things without doing any hard work. That's what they want to do!Why are young men attending college at lower rates than young women? Aren't they attending the same schools as their sisters? Being good in school has always been seen as weird and unmanly by most Americans, and I think that mindset is having a greater and greater impact on young men's choices. Boys with good grades are seen as weird losers and not very masculine -- they're like girls, who are allowed to be good in school. It's much cooler to be an amusing fuckup.

      When we express horror at Trump's latest baffling act on the campaign trail, I think we sound, to these young men, like annoyingly responsible scolds. Obviously, they like Trump's offensive humor because they like offending people, but they also relate to Trump's refusal to restrain his speech because trying to avoid giving offense to people is hard work. It's almost like schoolwork, and the same people are good at it, for the same reasons -- because they're grade-grubbing goody-goodies who seem to like spoiling everyone else's fun.

    • [10-29] No, Trump is still not "a spent and exhausted force": Disputes the Jamelle Bouie piece I cited above.

    • [10-30] A war at home is still a war, guys:

      This is a reminder of one reason Donald Trump is winning over some young men, apart from the bro-ishness and misogyny of his campaign: Trump and his surrogates have young men convinced that a vote for Harris is a vote for war. Trump regularly says that a Harris presidency will lead to World War III, while he'll instantly, magically, and single-handedly end all the major wars taking place right now and prevent future wars by means of a slogan, "Peace Through Strength." Harris, regrettably, has welcomed the support not only of Liz Cheney (who has stood up for the rule of law in recent years) but also of her father, whom nobody admires these days and who was unquestionably a warmonger.

  • Seth Meyers: [10-31] A Closer Look: Trump's embarrassing garbage stunt might be his most surreal photo op ever.

Vance, and other Republicans:

Harris:

  • James Carville: [10-23] Three reasons I'm certain Kamala Harris will win: Spoken like the hack-consultant he's always been:

    1. Trump is a repeat electoral loser. This time will be no different.
    2. Money matters, and Harris has it in droves.
    3. It's just a feeling.

    His feeling?

    For the past decade, Trump has infected American life with a malignant political sickness, one that would have wiped out many other global democracies. On Jan. 6, 2021, our democracy itself nearly succumbed to it. But Trump has stated clearly that this will be the last time he runs for president. That is exactly why we should be exhilarated by what comes next: Trump is a loser; he is going to lose again. And it is highly likely that there will be no other who can carry the MAGA mantle in his wake -- certainly not his running mate.

  • Lydie Lake: [10-30] Harris's final push before election day: "Kamala Harris delivered her closing argument in a charged pre-election rally near the White House."

  • Colleen Long/Darlene Superville/Nadia Lathan: [10-25] Beyoncé and Kamala Harris team up for Houston rally. One big thing they talked about was abortion, including how in Texas "the infant death rate has increased, more babies have died of birth defects and maternal mortality has risen.

  • Chris Megerian/Colleen Long/Steve Karnowski: [10-17] Following death of Hamas leader, Harris says it's 'time for the day after to begin' in Gaza. If by "day after" you mean the day after the killing ends, that's been overdue since Oct. 8, 2023 (and really many years before), but the statement would seem to reject the idea that the war has to go on until there are no Palestiniains left to kill, which seems to be Netanyahu's agenda.

  • Christian Paz: [10-24] How "Trump is a fascist" became Kamala's closing argument: "Brat summer is over; 'Trump is a fascist' fall is in." I chased this piece down after Nathan J Robinson tweeted:

    One of the main mistakes Hillary Clinton made was making her central message "Trump is bad" without offering a positive case for why she would be a good president. The error is being repeated.

    A quick search reveals more complaints about this as a strategy, along with much consternation that Harris is blowing the campaign, possibly letting Trump win. I get that the "Trump is a fascist" jab is suddenly fashionable thanks to the Kelly quote, although it's been commonplace for years among people who know much about the history of fascism, and are willing to define it broadly enough that a 78-year-old American might qualify. I'd say that Trump is a bit more complicated and peculiar than simply being a generic fascist, although sure, if you formulated a generic F-scale, he would pass as a fascist, and it wouldn't be a close call. But I have two worries here: one is that most Americans don't know or care much about fascism -- other than that it's a generic slur, which judging from his use of the word (e.g., to slam "radical leftists") seems to be his understanding; the other is that there are lots of other adjectives and epithets that get more surely and much quicker to the point of why Trump is bad: even fancy words like sociopath, narcissist, oligarch, and misanthrope work better; as well as more common ones like racist, sexist, elitist, demagogue; you could point out that he's both a blowhard and a buffoon; or you could settle for something a bit more colorful, like "flaming asshole." Or rather than just using labels/names, you could expand on how he talks and acts, about his scams and delusions -- sorry if I haven't mentioned lies before, but they come in so many flavors and variations you could do a whole taxonomy, like the list of fallacies (many of which he exemplifies -- at least the ones that don't demand much logic).

    As for Robinson's complaint, I think that's typical of left intellectuals, who've spent all their lives trying to win people over on issues. Politicians have to be more practical, especially because they have to win majorities, while all activists can hope for are incremental gains. Harris has a lot of planks in her platform, and if you're seriously interested in policy, there's a lot to talk about there (and not all good, even if, like most leftists, you're willing to settle for small increments). But to win an election, she needs to focus on the elements that can get her majority support.

    And the one key thing that should put her over the top is that he's Donald Trump, and she isn't: that the only chance we voters have of getting rid of Trump is to vote for her. To do this, she needs to focus relentlessly on his negatives. She doesn't need to toot her own horn much, as every negative she exposes him for is an implicit contrast: to say "Trump is a fascist" implies that "I am not." That may not be saying much, but it's something, and it should be enough. And Robinson, at least, should know better. I find it hard -- I mean, he's just co-authored a book with Noam Chomsky -- seriously expects any Democrat to offer "a positive case for why she would be a good president." All any voter can do is pick one item from a limited, pre-arranged menu. Sometimes you do get a chance to vote for someone you really like or at least respect, but quite often the best you can do is to vote against the candidate you most despise.

    That choice seems awfully clear to me this year. Unfortunately, it appears that many people are still confused and/or misguided. At this point, I don't see any value in second-guessing the Harris campaign. I have no reason to think they don't want to win this as badly as I want them to win. They have lots of money, lots of research, and lots of organization. They think they're doing the right things, and I hope and pray they're right. It's endgame now, so let them run their last plays. And if they do lose, that will be the time to be merciless in your criticism. (That'll be about the only fun you'll have in the next four years. By the way, if you want a head start, check out this book.)

  • Jennifer Rubin: [10-27] To understand the US economic success is to love Harris's plan: "Kamala Harris's economic proposals would build on the remarkable US comeback since the pandemic."

Walz, Biden, and other Democrats:

Supreme Court, legal matters, and other crimes:

Climate and environment:

Business, labor, and Economists:

Ukraine and Russia:

Elsewhere in the world and/or/in spite of America's empire:


Other stories:

  • Ross Rosenfeld: [10-30] How America's craven plutocrats busted the myth of the business hero: "The members of the billionaire executive class have billed themselves as great men of history beyond scrutiny and reproach. his is the year that shattered that illusion." Sorry to break this, but that illusion has been pretty thoroughly debunked at least since Ida B. Wells. And while I appreciate the occasional Harris supporter in their ranks, she isn't really that much of a reach: arguably she'll do better by them than their culturally simpatico golf cheat buddy.

  • Jeffrey St Clair: [10-25] Roaming Charges: Antic dispositions: Some tidbits:

    • More than half of Trump's supporters don't believe he'll actually do many of the things he claims he'll do (mass deportations, siccing the military on domestic protesters and political rivals), while more than half of Harris's supporters hope she'll implement many of the policies (end the genocide/single-payer) she claims she won't. And that pretty much sums up this election.

    • Barnett R. Rubin, former US diplomat: "Why do people keep saying that US politics is polarized? Look at the big picture. Genocide enjoys broad bipartisan support."

    • Fox News' Brian Kilmeade defended Trump's statement that he wants the "kind of generals that Hitler had." Kilmeade: "I can absolutely see him go, it'd be great to have German generals that actually do what we ask them to do, maybe not fully being cognizant of the third rail of German generals who were Nazis or whatever." Kilmeade and Trump may not be "cognizant" of the fact that several "German generals" (von Stauffenberg, Friedrich Olbricht, and Ludwig Beck) tried to blow Hitler to bits and Germany's most famous General, Rommel, was forced to kill himself after being implicated in the plot.

    • Hours after the Washington Post announced its decision not to endorse [Kamala Harris, directed by Post owner Jeff Bezos], the Associated Press reported that Donald Trump met with executives from Blue Origin, the space company owned by Bezos that has a $3.4 billion NASA contract to build a spacecraft to take astronauts to the moon and back.

    • Eugene Debs: "I'd rather vote for something I want and don't get it, than vote for something I don't want and get it."

    • Trump: "I worked a shift at McDonalds yesterday." A McDonalds shift is eight hours, not 18 minutes . . . Dukakis in a tank looked less ridiculous.

    • Sounds familiar . . . [followed by a tweet which reads: "In 1938, Benito Mussolini closed off a wheat field & did a photo shoot showing him harvesting hay in order to portray himself as a common working man. He was surrounded by workers who had been vetted as loyal to the party." Includes a picture of the shirtless Fascist with cap and aviator goggles.]

    • Since 2001, forest fires have shifted north and grown more intense. According to a new study in Science, global CO2 emissions from forest fires have increased by 60% in the last two decades.

    • Christian nationalist pastor Joel Webbon called for the public execution of women who falsely claim to have been sexually assaulted: "MeToo would end real fast . . . All you have to do is publicly execute a few women who have lied."

    • Montana Senate candidate Tim Sheehy, on why he wants to abolish the Dept. of Education: "We formed that department so little Black girls could go to school down South, and we could have integrated schooling. We don't need that anymore."

    • Edward Luce, associate editor of the Financial Times: "Hard to overstate what a sinister figure Elon Musk is. Never seen one oligarch in a Western democracy intervene on anything like this scale with unending Goebbels-grade lies." Musk is the most obnoxious kid in middle school who is running the campaign of the school bully for student council without even being asked because even the school bully doesn't want to be around him . . .

Obituaries

Books

Music (and other arts?)

  • Rick Lopez: [10-24] Update.01 to The Sam Rivers Sessionography: A Work in Progress: Fulfilling his subtitle, with a very substantial addition, on top of a "magnificent" and "gorgeous" (to quote my own blurb) 764-page book that already seemed definitive. By the way, those words were written in advance of this "press release" quoted on page 3:

    Michael Hull's Fifth Column Films has begun work on a feature-length documentary about Sam Rivers through the lens of The Sam Rivers Sessionography, a book by Rick Lopez. Rivers was a musical genius who spent his life obsessed with creating intricate compositions that pushed music to places no one else could conceive of. It's only fitting that his biographer has invented an entirely new way to understand the life of an artist through a minutely detailed portrait that could only flower from the uniquely focused mind of Lopez. Rivers was a massive talent who has been mostly forgotten by the American jazz scene and is rarely included in the conversation about great masters of the art. Lopez's book and this film aim to correct that oversight, and make the case that Sam Rivers should take his place in the pantheon of the 20th century.

    Full disclosure: Michael Hull is my nephew. He started in Jason Bailey's Wichita-based film crew (e.g., My Day in the Barrel), produced a film Smokers no one has heard of, wrote a novel that hasn't been published and, most relevant here, made the superb documentary Betrayal at Attica. I've admired Lopez since I first discovered him twenty-some years ago, so the idea of introducing him and Mike was blindingly obvious. (I was also the person who introduced Mike and Liz Fink, although the gestation period on that project took much longer.) We have some money invested in this project, which you can take as a caveat if you wish, but I regard more as a vote of confidence. Still some ways to go, but here's a preliminary trailer and more information.

  • John McWhorter: [10-24] It sounded like dancing, drinking and sex. It blew people's minds. I only noticed this piece on "the long, syncopated journey from Scott Joplin to Beyoncé" because Allen Lowe complained about it: "his views of ragime are just bizarre and beneath even the most minimal amount of knowledge, full of stereotypes and really thirdhand historiography"; Phil Dyess-Nugent added: "Having made his name writing about some things he seemed to understand, John McWhorter has since demonstrated his cluelessness on a vast array of subjects." That's my general impression of the few columns I've read, especially since his ridiculous Woke Racism book. This I'm less sure about, maybe because I don't know or chare that much about ragtime (or, I might as well admit, Beyoncé), so I'm mostly just noting a lot of name-dropping and connect-the-dots that favors obvious over interesting.

  • Riotriot: [10-30] Takes by the ocean: Zambian nightlife and spongian jawbox.

Chatter

  • Peter Daou [10-27]

    QUESTION: Who is worse for Palestinians, Trump or Harris?

    ANSWER: Harris is worse for Palestinians.

    WHY?

    1. Harris and Biden are already culpable for a year-long genocide.
    2. Like Trump, Harris vows to keep giving Israel unconditional support.
    3. Therefore, Trump can never match Harris's death toll.
    4. Rewarding Harris's war crimes with a vote emboldens Netanyahu and opens the floodgates for future tyrants.
    5. If Trump wins and Democrats suddenly decide massacring children is wrong, Trump will face much greater resistance to letting Israel commit atrocities.

    Bottom line: Voting third party is the only moral choice, but if liberals insist on comparing Trump to Harris, Harris is worse for Palestinians.

    I found this immediately after posting my preliminary draft on who to vote for president and why, so I've already explained why I disagree with Daou's conclusion so strongly. But perhaps I should stress one very important point, which is that voting is not a moral choice; it is a political choice. I'm not going to write a disquisition on the difference, but will insist that it is a category error to vote based on morality. As for Daou's five points:

    1. True, but the order is wrong, like saying "Speer and Hitler are already culpable," where the clearest charge against Speer (and Harris) is not breaking with their leader. By the way, Biden is more like Speer than to Hitler -- in playing follow-the-leader, but also given their critical position in the arms pipeline.
    2. Not false, but Harris (unlike Trump and Graham) has never said "finish the job," and she's not unaware of the human toll Israel's "self-defense" is taking, so I'd say that continued "unconditional support" is slightly less likely from her. Admittedly, that's a thin reed she has often taken pains to cover up.
    3. No way of predicting, but no reason to underestimate Trump's capacity for getting people killed. His general contempt for most of the world suggests quite the opposite.
    4. Clearly, massively false. Netanyahu's preference for Trump is widely known, not only through his own words and acts but through mutual donors like Myriam Adelson.
    5. Hard to know where to begin with this variation on "if the fascists win, the revolution will hasten." Ever hear of "moral hazard"? Sure, some Democrats may learn to blame the genocide on Trump -- as some Democrats came to blame Nixon for Vietnam -- but most will simply be shocked and search for scapegoats to blame, especially "pro-Palestinians" like Daou.

    Daou's conclusion that "Harris is worse for Palestinians" is horribly wrong, even if "Harris is no good for Palestinians" may well be true. But I wouldn't be much swayed if one could argue that one candidate would be good or better, because I've never looked at this conflict through that prism. I never quite bought the argument that "Palestinians have dug their own graves," but I did have sympathies for Israel at one point, which may be why I still wish to emphasize that genocide is bad (and I mean really bad) for Israel (and for America, which is implicated not just due to recent arms support but via longstanding cultural and political mores), and that in itself is reason enough to oppose it. (And sure, it's even worse for the killed than the killers, and that's another reason to oppose it, but it doesn't have to be the only one.)

    Some more comments on Daou's tweet:

    • Nathan J Robinson: Peter, this doesn't make sense. It could absolutely get worse under Trump. Any pressure to provide any aid whatsoever to Gaza will disappear. Greater pressure may be brought on Egypt to let Israel fully ethnically cleanse Gaza. Don't assume this is as bad as it can get.

    • Andrew Revkin: I sense @RudyGiuliani would disagree with you, @peterdaou, on who's worse for Palestinians. Here's how he explained the Trump plan at the #MSGRally tonight in his own words.

    • Films For Action: When we think of Trump in power again, we recall that even a genocide can get much worse. Trump just said that Netanyahu must "go further" in Gaza while criticizing Biden for "trying to hold him back." The full statement is highly worth reading: [link to Arizona Palestinian, Arab, Muslim, and Progressive Democrats Statement on Presidential Election].

    • Shadowblade: Who moved the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem?

    • Jonathan Blank Films: [Link to 'Trump would be the worst': Palestinians react to US presidential race.]

  • Nathan J Robinson: [12-27] [comment attached to a clip of Tucker Carlson's MSG rally rant] The level of uncontrolled rage is terrifying, but I think if Trump is elected you will see it get far worse. The amount of overt racism will increase, the view of Democrats, leftists, migrants being scum in need of elimination. JD Vance has made clear that Pinochet is the model.

  • Mehdi Hasan: [10-30] Donald Trump is going around telling Michigan Muslims he'll end the war, be the peace president, and how pro-Muslim (!) he is.

    Meanwhile, Dems sent Bill Clinton to lecture Michigan Muslims on how it's all Hamas's fault that Israel is massacring kids and killing civilians holding white flags.

    Whether or not they end up losing Michigan, at this point the Dems deserve to lose Michigan. Sheesh.

  • Aaron Rupar: [10-31] Trump on Liz Cheney: "Let's put her with a rifle standing there with 9 barrels shooting at her. Let's see how she feels about it. You know, when the cuns are trained on her face."


Local tags (these can be linked to directly): music.

Original count: 228 links, 11718 words (15894 total)

Current count: 253 links, 12905 words (17532 total)

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Speaking of Which: Top 10 Reasons to Vote for Harris vs. Trump

Blog link.

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Daily Log

Birthday dinner was yesterday. I wrote up this post on Facebook:

Thanks to everyone for the birthday wishes, and especially to those who so kind for allowing me to cook for them. Plate photo below. Coconut rice in middle, surrounded by (cw from top): "eggplant delight"; beef curry with potatoes; okra; pork curry with mango pickle; "punchy-crunchy ginger salad" (sort of); chicken coconut curry; sweet potato curry. I shopped Wednesday. Thought I'd do more Thursday, but decided to go with what I got. Made the three meat curries Thursday evening, as well as oatmeal stout cake for dessert. They took a long time -- seems like everything does these days -- but I was pleased with the results (I wound up using Patak Mango Relish with the pork). Finishing up today was more of a struggle. The sweet potato is a variation on a pumpkin-tamarind, but took much longer. The salad is made with pickled ginger, but I didn't have several ingredients, and wound up trying a lot of different things in it before I got something that seemed to work. As I said, this was my first stab at Burmese. Clearly I have much more to learn, but the advertised "rivers of flavor" were certainly there.

I also wrote a letter to Jan Barnes with more detail on the dinner, the work involved, and future plans:

My hip condition has been diagnosed as sacroiliac joint dysfunction. That's where the pelvis fuses into the spine, so it's different from what they try to fix with hip replacement surgery. It does sometimes manifest as lower back pain. I've never been diagnosed as having arthritis, although pretty much everyone I've ever known has had it by the time they reached my age (now 74). I'm not sure what the technical definition is, but popularly it seems to be a synonym for getting old and creaky. I have some probable arthritis in my hands, but I also probably also have carpal tunnel syndrome, and suspect each makes the other worse.

I did get some physical therapy for the sacroiliac pain, but it didn't help much. The idea was to strengthen your hip muscles to relieve pressure on the joints, but the effect was to add muscle pain to joint pain. Had I stuck with it, presumably the muscle pain would fade and I'd be better. I've found that prednisone works much better, but so far I've hoarded my pills for future really bad days -- like when I do a lot of cooking. I figured yesterday would be one, especially after much pain the day before, but I held off on taking my last pills, and in the end didn't need to. That I can stand the pain I have suggests that other people have it much worse than I do. Or maybe that I have inherited some of my mother's high tolerance for pain. And possibly that bitching about it is itself therapy.

First day of cooking, as noted, was spectacularly successful. Second day was a chaotic mess. I started with the topping on the cake, which turned out perfect (although the "new" can of sweetened condensed milk was much browner than expected, I used it anyway, as the broiler would brown it anyway; I just had to be careful not to burn it). After that, I roasted eggplants, and made a sweet potato tamarind curry (recipe was for pumpkin, with sweet potato offered as an alternative, noting it would take longer to cook -- well over an hour in my case, vs. 8 minutes the recipe expected for pumpkin). I finished the "eggplant delight," which was not as good as I expected, but at least had one dish on the table. I sliced the okra and shallots, to stir-fry later. (I had, by that point, prepped big piles of chopped onions, garlic, shallots, ginger, shrimp powder, serrano chiles, cilantro, and mint, as most of the recipes call for them in various combinations.)

I started work on the "punchy-crunchy ginger salad," which as it turned out I only had about half of the specified ingredients for, but I figured it was my best candidate among the salads. It took hours to fiddle with until I got something I liked. The "punchy" is pickled ginger, like they serve in sushi restaurants (although the recipe cautioned to use the white rather than the more common pink). I had two aged but unopened jars in the pantry, as well as some lost in the back of the refrigerator. I didn't like the taste of the first jar I opened, so threw it out. The second wasn't great either, but good enough to use. I took out half of the jar, chopped it up, and put it in my salad bowl. (Later, when I thought it wasn't punchy enough, I added the rest, as well as some of the pickling fluid.)

The ginger would be mixed with shredded Chinese (napa) cabbage, but all I saw on my shopping day were soft and wilted, so I bought a small white cabbage head instead. I shredded one quarter of it, mixed it in, then decided I wanted a bit of color, so I shredded a similar amount of romaine lettuce. Then I added three roma tomatoes, sliced lengthwise in narrow strips, then crosswise into thirds. That was the basic salad part. Next bit was to add the "crunchy," which called for roasted split peas, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, toasted sesame seeds, fried garlic slices, and chopped roasted peanuts. I only had the latter three, so I scrambled to find other things that might work. I thought cashews would be good, but couldn't find any (among the dozen other bags of nuts I stock; I did throw some hazelnuts in). I also felt short on "punchy," so I chopped up some pickled mango and mustard stem, and threw that in.

For dressing, the recipe called for lime juice and garlic oil. I didn't have the latter (or the presence of mind to dig out the roasted garlic in the refrigerator, which was packed in suitable oil), so I used toasted sesame oil, and supplemented the lime juice with pickled ginger juice. In the end, I decided it was good enough to serve, and a nice complement to everything else.

Meanwhile, I stir-fried the okra and shallots (which turned out very good -- the only dish I had no leftovers of), and started to heat the coconut milk for the rice. For the latter, I used the thicker "coconut cream," only to have it boil over, and put one burner out of commission. I started again on another burner, and failed to time what I was doing. In the end, some stuck to the bottom of the pan, but the part on top was done, and separated and fluffed up fairly nicely. Meanwhile, I scrambled for pans and reheated all of the curries. I was pretty frazzled by that point, trying to clean up a bit while moving between the salad and the burners, and in a particularly dumb moment, sliced my thumb, so had to bandage that up.

Eventually I got it all out into serving dishes, and (aside from the eggplant) it all turned out to be remarkably good. Six people total, not enough to eat all of the food, but plenty for the event. Despite the mess at the end, I wasn't as exhausted as is often the case with these dinners, so could socialize a bit. Later served the cake and three shrink-flated "pints" of Haagen-Dasz. (Cake recipe suggests making orange-date ice cream, which I've done in the past, but didn't attempt this time.)

I spent the last month thinking about this project, and now it's done, about as well as I had hoped. I have a fair amount of unused groceries and things, some of which I may use for a "leftovers" dinner some time next week. I wasn't able to make the famous "tea leaf salad" (which seems to be the "national dish"), mostly because I couldn't find the fermented tea leaves that go into the dressing, but also I didn't fully understand the "crunchy" mix-ins that go into it. In my frustration, I went on Amazon and ordered the missing ingredients: a jar of tea leaves, and a bag of "roasted beans" for the crunchy bits, but won't get them until mid-week. The rice and curries will keep, so that will be the new value-added to the "leftovers" dinner.

Other than that, I guess I'm ready to move on. I've barely started my weekly blog posts, but I do have a good start on my "Top Ten Reasons to Vote for Harris vs. Trump," so I'll move onto that first. Also need to get the upstairs room done. I have all of the paneling up in the closet, leaving the ceiling and the exoskeleton trim. (Walls are plaster-on-lath, so it's hard to find studs to secure shelves and drawers to. Plus the walls are all crooked anyway. The paneling is mostly glued up -- temporarily being held in with screws -- but I left gaps on all the edges, figuring I'd add 1x2 trim all around, and I could then attach other things to the trim boards. So I still have all the latter to do.) I should get the walls painted either today or tomorrow, then I still need to paint the trim (windows, doors, baseboards), which will take another day or two. Then we can start moving back in.

Also need to get working on my jazz poll project, which will kick off in mid-November, and take most of my time up to the end of the year.

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Music Week

Expanded blog post, October archive (in progress).

Tweet: Music Week: 26 albums, 5 A-list

Music: Current count 43065 [43039] rated (+26), 46 [41] unrated (+5).

Published another abbreviated Speaking of Which yesterday. Came to 212 links, 12063 words, but I added some more stuff this morning, and may add even more before this is posted. My computer time (listening and writing) was limited last week, mostly by a home repair project that drags on and on, with little hope of winding up soon. Well, maybe a little hope: the collapsed ceiling is repaired, old wallpaper removed, walls patched up, the bedroom walls primed, half of the closet paneling put up, and we just got back from buying finish paint. If I can muster the time, the paint and paneling should be doable in 2-3 days, but I haven't been able to get many good working shifts in, and I've repeatedly been snagged by Murphy's law.

Plus, I have another project this week, which is being pushed ahead by a deadline, plus the thought that it might be a lot more fun to do. That's my annual birthday dinner, scheduled for Friday, with at present nothing more than a concept: my first ever stab at making Burmese cuisine. I've often picked out exotic locales for past birthday dinners, and in my peak years managed to make twenty-some dishes.

But I've never picked one I had so little experience with and knew so little about. My experience is one take-out meal in New York at least 12 years ago. The reason I can date it is because I bought a Burmese cookbook shortly after, but it didn't have the dish that most delighted me from the restaurant, and nothing else really caught my eye, so I've never cooked anything from it. The concept came from seeing that cookbook on the shelf, and thinking maybe I should finally do something with it.

I may have made a dish or two from broader area cookbooks -- Charmaine Solomon's The Complete Asian Cookbook introduced me to all hot spots from India through Indonesia and China to Japan -- and I've gone deep on Indian (although not necessarily Bengali), Thai, and Chinese, which border old Burma (now Myanmar), so I expect to be working within those parameters. But as of Tuesday afternoon, I still don't have a menu, much less any shopping or prep done. My only move so far has been to buy a second Burmese cookbook, plus one that's more generically southeast Asian. (I haven't generally been listing cookbooks in my "recent reading" roll, but added my old Burma: Rivers of Flavor last week, so I figured I might as well spotlight the new books as well.) Generic southeast Asian may well be what I wind up with -- especially given that the local grocers are mostly Vietnamese, plus a couple Indian.

I'm torn between working on the room and on the menu next, but either option seems more enticing that diddling further on this post. Should be enough here for any decent week.


New records reviewed this week:

  • Nick Adema: Urban Chaos (2023 [2024], ZenneZ): [cd]: B+(***)
  • JD Allen: The Dark, the Light, the Grey and the Colorful (2024, Savant): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Andy Baker: From Here, From There (2018 [2024], Calligram): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Basic: This Is Basic (2024, No Quarter): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Big Freedia With the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra: Live at the Orpheum Theater (2023 [2024], Queen Diva): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Anne Burnell & Mark Burnell: This Could Be the Start of Something Big (2024, Spectrum Music): [cd]: B
  • Chris Corsano/Joe Baiza/Mike Watt: Corsano Baiza Watt Trio (2023 [2024], Yucca Alta): [bc]: B+(*)
  • Doug Ferony With His Swingin Big Band: Alright Okay You Win (Ferony Enterprizes Music)
  • Ingebrigt Hĺker Flaten/(Exit) Knarr: Breezy (2024, Sonic Transmissions): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Floating Points: Cascade (2024, Ninja Tune): [sp]: A-
  • Darius Jones: Legend of e'Boi (The Hypervigilant Eye) (2024, AUM Fidelity): [cd]: A-
  • Doug MacDonald and the Coachella Valley Trio: Live at the Rancho Mirage Library (2024, DMAC Music): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Mark Masters Ensemble: Sui Generis (2023 [2024], Capri): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Gurf Morlix: In Love at Zero Degrees (2024, Rootball): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Eric Person: Rhythm Edge (2024, Distinction): [cd]: B
  • Jason Robinson: Ancestral Numbers II (2023 [2024], Playscape): [cd]: A-
  • Snotty Nose Rez Kids: Red Future (2024, Savage Mob): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Moses Sumney: Sophcore (2024, Tuntum, EP): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Ohad Talmor/Chris Tordini/Eric McPherson: Back to the Land (2023 [2024], Intakt, 2CD): [sp]: B+(***)
  • Fred Thomas: Window in the Rhythm (2024, Polyvinyl): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Tropical Fuck Storm: Tropical Fuck Storm's Inflatable Graveyard (2024, Three Lobed): [sp]: B+(*)
  • Jack Wood & Nichaud Fitzgibbon: Movie Magic: Great Songs From the Movies (2024, Jazz Hang): [cd]: B+(**)
  • Jamie xx: In Waves (2024, Young): [sp]: A-
  • Dann Zinn: Two Roads (2024, Ridgeway): [cd]: B+(**)

Recent reissues, compilations, and vault discoveries:

  • William Basinski: September 23rd (1982, Temporary Residence): [bc]: B+(*)

Old music:

  • Adema Manoukas Octet: New Roots (2021 [2022], self-released): [bc]: B+(***)
  • Sister Rosetta Tharpe: The Swinging Gospel Queen 1939-1947 (1939-47 [1998], Blues Collection): [sp]: A-
  • Sister Rosetta Tharpe: Live in 1960 (1960 [1991], ORG Music): [sp]: B+(**)
  • Sister Rosetta Tharpe: Sister on Tour (1961, Verve): [sp]: B+(***)


Unpacking: Found in the mail last week:

  • The Attic & Eve Risser: La Grande Crue (NoBusiness) [10-04]
  • Arthur Blythe Quartet: Live From Studio Rivbea: July 6, 1976 (NoBusiness) [10-04]
  • Bill Evans: In Norway: The Kongsberg Concert (1970, Elemental Music, 2CD) [11-29]
  • Joe Fonda Quartet: Eyes on the Horizon (Long Song) [11-15]
  • Joel Futterman: Innervoice (NoBusiness) [10-04]
  • Andrew Hill: A Beautiful Day Revisited (2002, Palmetto, 2CD) [11-01]
  • B.B. King: In France: Live at the 1977 Nancy Jazz Pulsations Festival (Deep Digs/Elemental Music) [11-29]
  • Michael McNeill: Barcode Poetry (Infrasonic Press) [10-01]
  • William Parker/Hugo Costa/Philipp Emsting: Pulsar (NoBusiness) [10-04]
  • Emily Remler: Cookin' at the Queens (1984-88, Resonance, 2CD) [11-29]
  • Sara Serpa: Encounters & Collisions (Biophilia) [11-15]
  • Spinifex: Undrilling the Hole (TryTone) [11-22]
  • Sun Ra: Lights on a Satellite: Live at the Left Bank (1978, Resonance, 2CD) [11-29]